Iran, India agree to speed up Chabahar port project
DAWN
The Chabahar port — being jointly
developed by India, Iran and Afghanistan — is on the Indian Ocean about 100
kilometres west of the Pakistan border. But development has stalled,
despite waivers to sanctions that the United States began reimposing last year
after withdrawing from a landmark 2015 nuclear deal with Iran.
“Just concluded a very productive
#IndiaIran Joint Commission Meeting,” Indian Foreign Minister Subrahmanyam
Jaishankar tweeted. “Reviewed the entire gamut of our
cooperation. Agreed on accelerating our Chabahar project,” he added, as he
wound up a two-day visit to the Iranian capital.
Washington withdrew from the
nuclear accord and reimposed sanctions on Tehran as part of a campaign of
“maximum pressure” aimed at reducing its arch-enemy’s regional role and missile
programme. The rare exemptions from the
sanctions are due mainly to the pivotal role of the port, and a planned railway
line, in breaking landlocked Afghanistan’s dependence on Pakistan for trade.
Iran’s President Hassan Rouhani
said Monday in a joint news conference with Jaishankar that the project would
boost trade in the region. “Completing the Chabahar-Zahedan
railway and connecting it to Iran’s national railway can elevate the position
of Chabahar port, revolutionise regional commerce and help transport goods on a
cheaper and shorter route,” he said. Mr Rouhani said maintaining regional
security was an important topic for Iran and India. “In the current situation, where
America stands against nations with unilateral sanctions, we have to try to
continue bilateral cooperation.
“This situation certainly will
not last, and America will be forced to stop its maximum pressure against Iran
sooner or later,” he said, without elaborating.
India stopped buying Iranian oil
after the US abolished waivers for some countries in May, in a move meant to
wipe out the Islamic republic’s main source of revenue. Despite tensions in their
relationship, Iran and India have sought to move forward and develop
partnerships.
Reference: https://www.dawn.com/news/1524050
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