Iran’s Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif says the Islamic Republic and the European Union have agreed to revive stalled talks.
Speaking at a press conference with visiting EU foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini on Tuesday, Zarif said Iran-EU “high-level” talks are to resume in the “near future.”
Zarif said the talks will focus on “energy, transportation, trade, environment, human rights and the scourge of narcotics.”
The Iranian foreign minister expressed hope that Mogherini’s visit would mark a fresh beginning for ties based on mutual respect.
Mogherini, for her part, said the nuclear agreement between Iran and P5+1 was a sign that diplomacy would bear a result
“The deal would be historical not only in the signing but also in the implementation,” she said.
Elsewhere she pointed to the opportunities brought about by the agreement, adding, “Europe and Iran are close.”
She said the nuclear breakthrough also has an "added value" in that it can serve as an example for addressing other issues around the world.
"The deal is not the end of a process, it is the beginning," she said.
Mogherini said she has assured Saudi leaders that Iran's nuclear agreement is a "good" accord which would benefit the "security" of the entire Middle East.
She noted that "full implementation" of the agreement would help Iran-EU relations.
The EU foreign policy chief arrived in Tehran for talks on implementing a recent nuclear agreement reached between Iran and six world powers.
Mogherini, who is accompanied by EU political director Helga Schmid, arrived in Tehran on Tuesday, from Saudi Arabia.
Mogherini was a lead negotiator for the P5+1 group of countries in the long-running talks over Tehran’s nuclear program that culminated in the July 14 agreement.
According to Mogherini’s office, her visit "will provide an opportunity for exchanges on the implementation of the agreement."
On July 14, Iran and the six world powers – the United States, France, Britain, Russia, China and Germany -- finalized the text of an agreement, dubbed the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), in the Austrian capital of Vienna.
Under the JCPOA, limits are put on Iran’s nuclear activities in exchange for a set of commitments by the P5+1, including the removal of all economic and financial bans against the Islamic Republic.
On July 20, the UN Security Council unanimously endorsed a draft resolution upholding the JCPOA. All 15 members of the body voted for the UN resolution in New York, setting the stage for the lifting of the Security Council sanctions against Iran.
In a statement released on Friday, over 70 European political, diplomatic and military figures said the July 14 agreement provides a framework for an end to the Western dispute with Iran over the Islamic Republic’s nuclear program.
The EU statement urged all parties to implement the agreement and called on the international community to throw its weight behind it.
By Press TV