Canadian Foreign Affairs Minister Stéphane Dion has confirmed to CBC News that preliminary contact has been made.
In 2012, the Harper administration cut ties with Tehran and expelled Iranian diplomats from Canada.
“Talks have started, yes, at the official level,” Dion said Friday. There has been speculation the discussions took place in New York City, where the two countries have political delegations.
“I will not comment,” the foreign minister said when asked about a possible location. “But the usual way by which countries who want to recreate links proceed, is step by step, at the official level in neutral territory.”
Rouhani: Iran to help connect Black Sea to Persian Gulf through Armenia
Tehran is ready to provide technical and engineering assistance to Armenia, President Hassan Rouhani said during his meeting with Armenian Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian.
The Iranian president reiterated that his country is willing to help connect the Black Sea to the Persian Gulf through Armenia, and said, “Iran and Armenia share similar stances towards regional and international developments”, Fars agency reported.
Agreement on abolition of visas between Armenia, Iran signed in Tehran
Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif and Armenian Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian signed an agreement on abolishing the visa between the two states, RA Foreign Ministry reports.
To remind, the agreement, previously endorsed by the Armenian government, aims to regulate the two countries citizens’’ mutual visits. According to the draft justification the agreement stems from the necessity of fostering bilateral relations, strengthening mutually beneficial trade as well as economic ties between Armenia and Iran.
Citizens with ordinary or diplomatic passports of Armenia and Iran can stay maximum of 90 days in a given 180-day period in the territory of the other country without requirement of obtaining a visa.
Armenia, Russia, Iran and Georgia Sign Energy Accord
YEREVAN (Arka)—Energy ministers of Armenia, Russia, Iran, and the deputy energy minister of Georgia signed a “road map” for building the North-South Energy Corridor during a meeting in Yerevan on Wednesday.
Armenia’s Deputy Energy Minister Areg Galstyan said after the signing ceremony, the “road map” formalized the steps and programs that will be implemented until 2019, when the energy corridor is supposed to be launched.
According to Galstyan, when the construction of power transmission lines between Armenia and Iran as well as Armenia and Georgia is over, it will enable parallel operation of power systems of the four countries, as they operated during the Soviet Union.
Galstyan also said the North-South Energy Corridor will be used primarily for seasonal electricity swaps through third countries. After the full launch of the corridor, its capacity will reach about 1,000 MW.
He said with Iranian funding, Armenian and Iran will build a power transmission line. Another line will be built between Armenia and Georgia with funding from the German KfW bank.
The Armenian government said after last year’s meeting with the energy ministers and the chief executive of a leading Russian electric utility, the four countries agreed to build a common energy market after the construction of two new power transmission lines connecting Armenia with Georgia and Iran.
Many Iran tourists to Turkey visit Armenian church on Akhtamar Island
The Iranians, who visit Turkey’s eastern provinces during Newroz—the Persian new year—, most visit Akhtamar Island in Lake Van—and where the Armenian Church of the Holy Cross is located—, and the Fortress of Van.
Head of the Van Tourism, Cultural Heritage Preservation and Development Association, Abdullah Tunçdemir, stated the aforesaid.
Tunçdemir told Milliyet daily newspaper of Turkey that a large number of Iranians have arrived in the country’s eastern provinces on Nowruz, and most of them have preferred Van.
He stressed that all hotels in Van are full during the Nowruz holidays.
Iranian-Turkish businessman Reza Zarrab arrested in US
Report Pro-Erdogan SABAH: Iranian-Turkish businessman Reza Zarrab has been arrested on U.S. charges on allegations that he and others engaged in hundreds of millions of dollars of transactions for the Iranian government or other entities as part of a scheme to evade sanctions against the country.
Zarrab, 33, was arrested in Miami on Saturday, March 19, on charges contained in a federal indictment in Manhattan against him and two Iranian citizens, Kamelia Jamshidy, 29, and Hossein Najafzadeh, 65, U.S. prosecutors said on Monday. Zarrab was presented to court early on Monday, while Jamshidy and Najafzadeh remain at large.
Zarrab, Jamshidy and Najafzadeh are being accused of engaging in hundreds of millions of dollars-worth of transactions on behalf of the government of Iran and other Iranian entities, which were barred by U.S. sanctions, laundering the proceeds of those illegal transactions and defrauding several financial institutions by concealing the true nature of these transactions.
Several companies based in Turkey are also being accused in the indictment of facilitating the transactions.
Important project of cooperation between Armenia, Georgia, Iran and Russia
The main energy officials of Georgia, Armenia, Iran and Russia will meet in Tbilisi next month for further negotiations on strengthening feedstock into links between their countries, confirmed Thursday the Minister of Energy of Armenia Levon Yolian.
The Ministers of the Armenian energy, Georgians and Iranians, and the general manager of a Russian electricity company leading had met in Yerevan for this purpose at the end of December. The Armenian government said after the meeting that the four nations could create a common energy market after the construction of two new transmission lines between Armenia with Georgia and Iran.
Yolian reiterated hopes for Armenia to become a major transit route for electricity and gas supply between the different parties. “A very active work is underway to involve the territory and energy of Armenia sector in the regional process,” he told reporters.
Yolian said the new talks on the issue are expected to start in the Georgian capital on April 11th. He added that the energy ministers of the four countries will be taking part.
The Georgian Ministry of Energy also reported Monday that the quadripartite meeting will be held in Tbilisi next month. “A Georgian delegation was already involved in the negotiations on this project in Yerevan, and these will continue in Tbilisi,” the ministry said in a statement to the Russian news agency RIA Novosti.
The information was made public when Alexander Novak, Minister of the Russian Energy, visited Tehran and met with his Iranian counterpart Hamid Chitchian. Novak reportedly said after the meeting that Russia and Iran are discussing the creation of an “electricity supply network” shared that would pass through Armenia and Azerbaijan. Without giving further details.
In a statement on the December negotiations in Yerevan, the Armenian Ministry of Energy and Natural Resources stated that Russia, Iran, Armenia and Georgia are exploring ways to establish a “regional energy market. “
In this regard, the Ministry stressed the importance of the ongoing construction of a third more powerful high-voltage transmission line between Armenia and Iran. According to officials in Yerevan this investment of $ 120 million will allow Armenia to quadruple its electricity exports to the Islamic Republic by 2018.
The ministry also stressed that Armenia and Georgia will soon start building a similar line that will allow electricity networks to be better interconnected. This proposed $ 115 million is also expected for 2018, and is financed by German development bank KfW State and the European Union.
Ara © armenews.com
Tsipras: Iran-Armenia-Greece collaboration is full of prospect
President of Armenia Serzh Sargsyan, who is on an official visit to Greece, on Tuesday laid a wreath to the Armenian Genocide monument in the Greek capital city of Athens, and paid tribute to the victims of this tragedy.
Subsequently, the President met with Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras of Greece.
The interlocutors underscored the need to make bilateral cooperation grow deeper in several domains, and to promote mutual investments and contacts between the business circles of the two countries.
Tsipras, for his part, considered the development of Iran-Armenia-Greece collaboration to be full of prospect, too. He added that Greece sees opportunities also in the establishment of cooperation between the European Union (EU) and the Eurasian Economic Union, and wishes to contribute to this objective. In addition, the Greek PM expressed readiness to assist in the development of Armenia-EU relations.
Separately, the Armenian President and the Greek PM exchanged views on current international matters, challenges, and regional developments.
Alexis Tsipras stressed that Greece supports the resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict through peace talks, and within the framework of the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) Minsk Group.
The tête-à-tête between the President of Armenia and the Prime Minister of Greece was followed by the talks in an expanded format.
Subsequently, the parties signed documents aimed at the development of Armenian-Greek cooperation in a number of domains.
President Serzh Sargsyan and Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras summed up the results of the negotiations with joint statements before the media.
Iran currently has 600 churches of which 480 are Armenian – scientific conference
Iran currently has 600 churches of which 480 are Armenian, an Iranian-Armenian researcher said today, calling for active efforts towards renovating the Armenian Christian monuments in the country.
In a report delivered at the scientific conference “New Jugha”, Shahen Hovsepyan said that only 80 operate today, with many others being in a forlorn condition. In his words, the churches were built by ethnic Armenian migrants or natives.
“They built them on two conditions: that the churches should have neither a belfry nor a cross, and they should never externally look like an Armenian church. An Armenian master had to build the kind of church that would differ from those being built in Armenia,” he added.
Hovsepyan said he knows that New Jugha alone has 25 Armenian churches.
The thematic reports, “Place Names in Epitaphs in New Jugha”, “Merchant Palaces’ Architectural Decorations” and “The Historic” were delivered on the sidelines of the event.
The conference aimed to introduce New Jugha’s architectural riches (including houses, churches, population), Hovsepyan added.
Speaking to reporters, Ahmat Montazeri, an art professor from the University of Isfahan (Iran), elaborated on the differences between the Armenian and Iranian houses in New Jugha. The expert, who has studied the Armenian monuments in Isfahan’s Armenian district, said he has noticed that the land properties owned by the Armenians start with the house yard, with the Persian houses being divided into two parts: guest rooms and a space for the family which was detached from the rest of the premises. “Due to the climate in New Jugha, where the stone store is not in abundance, they built houses of bricks, without ever using stones. The same applies to churches, which were built of bricks and clay,” he added.
The professor noted that out of the 300 Armenian houses in 1985, only 70 were preserved as of 2015. But he denied any state role in pulling down houses. “Very often, old residents who were from Old Jugha sold the house to someone who didn’t much care about preserving an ancient value and renovated the entire premises,” he said.
Montazeri added that the state has now imposed certain restrictions in an effort to preserve the cultural heritage of New Jugha.
“Ten houses have been purchased to be rebuilt as cultural centers. One of the houses now operates as a university dealing with the culture of New Jugha,” he added.
For his contribution towards promoting a research of, and preserving, the Armenian monuments in New Jugha and the neighboring regions, Montazeri was earlier today honored with an acknowledgement award by Armenia’s minister of urban development.
Iran Election: Principlists lead votes countrywide, reformists win Tehran
Latest results of Iran’s twin elections show that candidates belonging to the Principalist camp are in the lead countrywide while reformists are at the helm in Tehran constituency.
According to the Iranian officials, with 90 percent of the votes counted by early morning on Sunday, 30 seats belonging to the capital city at the parliament have been won by reformist figures, though the result is still prone to change pending further vote count.
The Iranian Interior Ministry’s latest report on Sunday said a total of 3,846 ballot boxes pertaining to parliamentary elections have been counted so far containing 2.633 million votes, adding that counting ballots from remaining boxes is still going on. Also a total of over 1.506 million votes cast in the Assembly of Experts’ elections in Tehran have been so far counted with nationwide count going on in parallel.
Based on the latest count, all parliamentary seats related to Tehran constituency have been won by reformist figures with former vice president Mohammad Reza Aref leading the capital city’s parliamentary list followed by Ali Motahhari, Alireza Mahjoub, Soheila Jelodarzadeh and Elias Hazrati, all reformist figures.
Meanwhile, the initial results of the Assembly of Experts elections in Tehran Province released by the Interior Ministry show that Chairman of the Expediency Council and former president, Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, and President Hassan Rouhani are leading the votes.
Current member of the Assembly of Experts, Mohsen Qomi, and Tehran’s interim Friday Prayers leaders, Mohammad Aqa Emami, and Mohammad Ali Movahhedi, stand in the third to fifth places.
Secretary of the Guardian Council Ahmad Jannati, Intelligence Minister Mahmoud Alavi and current chairman of the Assembly of Experts, Mohammad Yazdi, are 10th to 12th, while Mohammad Taqi Mesbah, who is also a member of the Assembly, stands at 16th place.
At least 33 million out of the 55 million eligible voters took part in Iran’s 5th Assembly of Experts and 10th parliamentary elections on Friday.
As many as 4,844 candidates, including about 500 women, were competing for a place in the 290-seat parliament. A total of 159 candidates ran for the 88-member Assembly of Experts. Members of the Assembly serve eight-year terms while MPs are elected every four years.
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