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TEHRAN: Tehran, Baku Seeking Closer Ties

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  • TEHRAN: Tehran, Baku Seeking Closer Ties

    TEHRAN, BAKU SEEKING CLOSER TIES

    PRESS TV, Iran
    July 31 2007

    Iran's Ambassador to Baku Nasser Hamidi-Zare' has said that Iran and
    Azerbaijan currently enjoy high-level bilateral relations.

    In an interview with the Azeri TV channel ANS on Monday, the envoy
    highlighted the firm resolve of the Iranian and Azeri officials to
    further cement ties.

    Commenting on Iran's stance toward the territorial conflict between
    Azerbaijan and Armenia over the Karabakh region, the ambassador
    stressed Iran's readiness to render support for settling the dispute.

    The diplomat stressed that Iran's relations with other countries
    including Armenia are by no means to the disadvantage of Azerbaijan,
    insisting that Tehran respects and recognizes the sovereignty of the
    Republic of Azerbaijan.

    Hamidi-Zare' said Iran believes the Karabakh conflict should
    be resolved peacefully through negotiations between Armenia and
    Azerbaijan.

    The envoy elaborated that Iran's government supports restoration of
    Azerbaijan's occupied territories and repatriation of all refugees
    displaced by the conflict to their home, and expressed the country's
    outright rejection of any illegal move which deteriorates the dispute.

    The territorial conflict between the two South Caucasus countries
    emerged in 1988.

    Referring to Iran's nuclear program, the ambassador said that thanks
    to its young scientists, Iran is already on the right track toward
    developing its nuclear technology for civilian purposes.

    "Once the US made every endeavor to force us to relinquish our resolve
    to access nuclear energy. Today, however, the Americans have been made
    to enter into negotiations with Iran over Iraq, seeking Iran's aid
    and recommendations to settle problems in the war-ravaged country,"
    he added.

    Highlighting the close viewpoints of Iran and Azerbaijan on the Caspian
    Sea legal regime, Hamidi-Zare' recalled the positive outcomes of the
    June confab held in Tehran.

    During the Tehran meeting, the foreign ministers of five Caspian
    littoral states managed for the first time to issue a joint communique
    and also agreed on the agenda of the next summit slated for August,
    he said.

    The Caspian Sea legal regime is based on two agreements signed between
    Iran and the former USSR in 1921 and 1940. The three new littoral
    states established after the collapse of the Soviet Union do not
    recognize those treaties, triggering a debate on the future status
    of the world's largest lake.

    In response to question about the likelihood of a US-Russia agreement
    on the common use of Gabala radar base in Azerbaijan, the ambassador
    said that the decision would undermine independence and sovereignty
    of the Azerbaijan Republic.

    He said the US has concerns over the legitimacy of its operations and
    hence seeks to secure bases for itself in different parts of the world.

    In the past, global powers used their force to exert pressure on
    other nations, he said, noting that policy has expired today. "Had
    the Gabala radar station been of any use, it would have prevented
    the collapse of the former Soviet Union," the envoy commented.

    Hamidi-Zare' stated that the Islamic Republic attaches significance
    only to the statements and actions of Azeri officials, reiterating
    the Azeri President Ilham Aliyev's remarks that Azerbaijan will never
    allow third countries to use its territory against Iran.
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