TEHRAN, April 17, YJC - Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif has started touring Central Asia and the Caucasus to boost Iran’s ties with three major countries in the region, especially in the field of economy.
TEHRAN, Young Journalists Club (YJC) - The
three-day tour spans Turkmenistan, Georgia, and Kyrgyzstan. A 20-member
delegation of businessmen and company representatives is accompanying
Zarif who cited transit cooperation among the objectives of the visit.
"There
is a possibility for transit cooperation with Georgia to link the Black
Sea to the Persian Gulf and the Indian Ocean which is a very favorable
way for the future of transit and the North-South Corridor," he said.
Zarif
made the remarks as he landed in Ashgabat on Sunday and was received by
Turkmenistan's First Deputy Foreign Minister Vepa Hajiyev.
The
Iranian foreign minister started his visit in Turkmenistan with a
meeting with President Gurbanguly Berdimuhamedow, discussing regional
developments as well as ways of expanding bilateral ties, IRNA news
agency reported.
The International North-South Transport Corridor
(NSTC) was formalized among India, Iran and Russia in 2000 to link the
Subcontinent and the Middle East to the Caucasus, Central Asia and
Europe.
Besides Iran, India and Russia, countries that are on
board to integrate into the transit network include Armenia, Azerbaijan,
Belarus, Kyrgyzstan, Kazakhstan, Ukraine, Turkey, Tajikistan, Oman,
Syria and Bulgaria.
Zarif has already said the countries involved
were discussing the "final details” of the project. Dry runs of the
route were conducted in 2014, from Mumbai to Baku and Astrakhan via
Bandar Abbas.
The NSTC opens a window for alignment with Silk Road
Economic Belt pushed by China to establish new trade and transport
links with Central Asia and Europe and provide a counterbalance to
US "pivot” to Asia.
Before his talks in Ashgabat, the Iranian minister said his talks
were aimed at reinforcing the bilateral ties among other
things. "Enhancement of relations with neighbors has always formed the
Iranian foreign policy’s most important priority,” he said.
Iran,
Zarif said, also sought to pave the way for increasing its non-oil
exports as well as technical and engineering services to the neighbors,
and follow up on the memoranda of understanding already signed with
them.
Zarif
touched on the Iranian foreign ministry's plans to help revitalize the
country's economy, saying exports of technical and engineering services
to neighbors were one of the subjects which his delegation sought to
bring up in the talks.
Leader of the Islamic Revolution Ayatollah
Seyyed Ali Khamenei named the new Persian year as "the year of
production and employment and "the Foreign Ministry has been taking
measures to help in their regard," he said.
Zarif also touched on common threats to the regional countries and the need for collective efforts to confront them.
"Our
region is faced with the threat of extremism and terrorism from all
sides and we need close cooperation with the regional countries," he
said.
(Source: Press TV)