Pakistan Today

Sanctions cannot solve Iran issue: China

China said Thursday sanctions would not “fundamentally solve” the Iranian nuclear issue and urged further dialogue to resolve an ongoing impasse over Tehran’s atomic programme.
The comments come after the United States and Europe said they may pursue fresh sanctions to try and stop Iran from getting an atomic bomb, in the wake of a UN report that offered strong evidence Tehran is pursuing nuclear weapons.
But China’s foreign ministry spokesman Hong Lei said sanctions “cannot fundamentally solve the Iran issue.”
“Dialogue and negotiation are the right way out for the Iranian nuclear issue,” he told reporters at a regular briefing. Hong added that the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) should clarify the report it published on Tuesday in a “just and objective” way through stronger cooperation with Iran.
The IAEA said in the report it had “serious concerns” based on “credible” information indicating that the Islamic republic “has carried out activities relevant to the development of a nuclear explosive device”. The IAEA report made strong waves after it was released Tuesday, with the United States saying it was looking at ways to put “additional pressure” on Tehran. President Barack Obama’s administration is “going to consult (with allies and partners) and look at ways to impose additional pressure on Iran,” Toner told reporters, adding Washington was considering “a range of options” against the Islamic republic.
“I don’t want to rule anything out or anything in,” he said, adding that unilateral sanctions were a possibility.
France and Britain also joined the US call for stronger punishment of Iran, which has already been subjected to four rounds of UN sanctions in retaliation for its nuclear programme. But Russia – a key ally of Iran along with China – said it was “gravely disappointed and bewildered”, adding that the report risked damaging the chance of a renewal of nuclear talks, and ruling out sanctions. Beijing on Thursday said the “pressing task” was to step up diplomacy “and push forward the P5+1 dialogue with Iran,” referring to talks between Tehran and the five permanent UN Security Council members plus Germany.

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