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NUKEWARS
US Senate presses Iran on Bahais
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Dec 21, 2013


Iran says 'slow' progress in nuclear deal talks
Tehran (AFP) Dec 21, 2013 - Technical talks between Iran and world powers on how to implement a landmark nuclear deal clinched last month are making progress, but slowly, a senior Iranian negotiator said Saturday.

The negotiations began Thursday in Geneva on the accord reached in the Swiss city that is aimed at buying time for a diplomatic solution to a decade-long standoff over Iran's nuclear drive.

"The talks that extended to a third day are making progress but slowly," deputy foreign minister Abbas Araqchi, who himself is not attending the talks, told a state-run television network in Tehran.

Araqchi did not give any other details.

The official IRNA news agency cited him as saying the negotiations could stretch into a fourth day on Sunday.

Experts had held four days of inconclusive talks in Vienna last week, but the Iranians walked out after Washington expanded its sanctions blacklist against Tehran.

Iran agreed to resume the talks after saying it was give given an "assurance" by EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton, who represents the six powers, that the talks would continue in good faith.

Under the landmark deal struck on November 24, Iran agreed to roll back or freeze parts of its nuclear drive for six months in exchange for modest sanctions relief and a promise by Western powers not to impose new sanctions.

During this period, which has not yet begun, Iran and world powers will seek to hammer out a long-term comprehensive accord to allay suspicions that Tehran's nuclear activities mask a military objective.

Iran denies the charge, saying its nuclear work is solely aimed at peaceful purposes of generating energy and producing medical isotopes.

The US Senate has urged Iran to free jailed members of the Bahai faith, raising human rights concerns as President Barack Obama pursues diplomacy to curtail Tehran's nuclear program.

In a resolution approved unanimously Friday amid a flurry of activity before a holiday break, the Senate called on Iran to free seven Bahai leaders among other detained members of the religion, including 12 educators.

The Senate "condemns the government of Iran for its state-sponsored persecution of its Bahai minority and its continued violation of the International Covenants on Human Rights," said the resolution, the latest in a series of similar appeals from the US Congress.

Iran's clerical regime allows religious freedom for several minorities but targets the Bahai faith. Bahais consider Bahaullah, an Iranian born in 1817, to be the latest prophet sent by God, a major divergence from Islamic orthodoxy.

The Bahai faith, which believes in equality among religions and between men and women, has its global headquarters in Haifa, Israel. While the site predates the Jewish state's 1948 creation, Iran's judiciary accused seven Bahai leaders of "spying" for arch-enemy Israel when it handed them 20-year prison terms in 2010.

The Senate resolution was passed without controversy as lawmakers debate whether to impose new sanctions on Iran, whose new, more moderate government last month struck a six-month agreement with world powers to freeze its nuclear program.

Obama on Friday urged Congress not to impose new sanctions, saying tough measures were already in place and that it was important to test engagement.

The resolution on the Bahais was introduced by Senator Mark Kirk, a staunch critic of Iran who is pushing to impose greater economic pressure, with the support of senators who back Obama's push for diplomacy.

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