Iran to set up its part of nuclear deal mechanism ‘this month’

Abbas Araghchi (R), political deputy at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Iran, and the Secretary General of the European Union's External Action Service (EEAS) Helga Schmid talk as they take part in a meeting of the Joint Commission of the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) attended by the E3+2 (China, France, Germany, Russia, United Kingdom) and Iran at Palais Coburg in Vienna, Austria on March 6, 2019. (AFP)
Updated 06 March 2019
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Iran to set up its part of nuclear deal mechanism ‘this month’

  • Araghchi was in the Austrian capital for a “joint commission” with representatives from China, Russia, Britain and France

VIENNA: Iran hopes to have its part of a new payments vehicle — devised to bypass US sanctions — ready within a fortnight, its Deputy Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said on Wednesday.
“We hope it will be before the end of the Iranian calendar year,” Araghchi told reporters in Vienna, referring to March 20 when the Iranian year ends.
Araghchi was in the Austrian capital for a “joint commission” with representatives from China, Russia, Britain and France — all signatories of the international deal on Iran’s nuclear program.
The new payments vehicle, known as INSTEX, is seen as key to European Union efforts to preserve the deal struck in 2015 between world powers and Iran over its nuclear program, the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA).
The US was also initially a signatory but last May US President Donald Trump withdrew from the deal and in November imposed sweeping new sanctions on Iran.
Araghchi said there was “very strong support” for the deal from all participants at the meeting.
He said the director of INSTEX was due to visit Tehran “very soon in order to have closed discussions” with his Iranian counterparts.
“An Iranian mirror structure is going to be established very soon and these two structures will work with each other,” he added.