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Iran sees deal in year in historic US talks
Iran sees deal in year in historic US talks (AFP) / 27 September 2013 Iran said on Thursday it hoped to seal a deal on its nuclear program within a year as its foreign minister held historic talks with US Secretary of State John Kerry. Kerry shook hands and met briefly one-on-one with a smiling Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif on the sidelines of the United Nations in one of the foes’ highest-level encounters since the 1979 Islamic Revolution. The top US diplomat pulled his Iranian counterpart aside saying “shall we talk for a few moments” after a meeting between Iran and six world powers that aimed to revive long-stalled negotiations over Tehran’s disputed nuclear program, a US official said. They met alone with no note-takers for about 30 minutes. The US-educated Zarif, tapped by new moderate President Hassan Rohani to lead the nuclear dossier, said the talks agreed to “jumpstart” work on a deal and “move towards finalising it, hopefully, within a year’s time.” “I thought I was too ambitious, bordering on naivete, but I saw that some of my colleagues were even more ambitious and wanted to move faster,” Zarif told a think tank forum as he joined Rohani on one of a slew of appearances during his week in New York. Kerry said he and his counterparts from the great powers contact group found Zarif’s 20-minute presentation “very different in tone, and very different in the vision that he held out with respect to the possibilities in the future.” Nuclear talks will resume on October 15 and 16 in Geneva, boosting hopes Iran will bring tangible proposals to the table on how to move forward as the West seeks to rein in its atomic programme. It was an extraordinary contact between the two countries that have had no diplomatic relations since 1980, when Iranian students stormed the US embassy in Tehran and held hostages for 444 days after the revolution that toppled the pro-Western shah. It is the first time that ministers of the two countries have sat together at talks on Iran’s nuclear programme, which Tehran says is for peaceful purposes but Western officials fear could be a covert grab for an atomic bomb. Rohani swept to power in June elections on promises to ease the nuclear-related tensions with the West, which have led to tough sanctions that have caused severe economic pain in Iran. Rouhani, a moderate cleric who replaced the firebrand Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, said Iran was committed to negotiate in “good faith.” “We are fully prepared to seriously engage in the process toward a negotiated and mutually agreeable settlement and do so in good faith and with a business-like mind,” Rohani told the think tank forum. Kerry pledged to remain cautious, saying “there’s a lot of work to be done” with plenty of questions still remaining about Iran’s nuclear program. “Needless to say one meeting and a change in tone, which was welcome, doesn’t answer those questions yet,” Kerry said. But speaking separately to CBS News, Kerry said Iranian hopes for a quick deal — and relief of sanctions — were possible. Asked about Rouhani’s earlier statement that a deal could take place in six months, Kerry said: “It’s possible to have a deal sooner than that depending on how forthcoming and clear Iran is prepared to be.” In an address to a UN conference on disarmament, Rohani called on Israel to sign the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. Israel is widely believed to have a nuclear program but does not acknowledge it. “As long as nuclear weapons exist, the risk of their use, threat of use and proliferation persist. The only absolute guarantee is their total elimination,” Rohani said. A State Department official, meanwhile, cautioned that it was early days yet and the “devil is in the details.” Zarif made a “thoughtful presentation” which laid out “their desire to come to an agreement fully implemented within a year’s time,” the official said. Until the teams get “down to work at an expert level to know … what they are willing to do in concrete terms, we have a good atmosphere, but we don’t have a result yet,” the official added. EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton organised the talks with Zarif, which involved the foreign ministers of the five permanent members of the UN Security Council — Britain, China, France, Russia and the United States — as well as Germany. Continue reading
KTN Business Focus on 26.09.2013 with Joy Doreen Bira
KTN Business Focus on 26.09.2013 with Joy Doreen Bira Watch KTN Streaming LIVE from Kenya 24/7 on http://www.ktnkenya.tv Follow us on http://www.twitter.com/… Continue reading
Eating and drinking top Metro violations
Eating and drinking top Metro violations Staff Reporter / 26 September 2013 As many as 12,948 tickets were issued for violations on Dubai Metro trains from January to July this year with a monthly average of 1,850 violations. The Red and Green Lines of Dubai Metro have been witnessing a huge throng — over 300 million passengers used the Green and Red lines since the beginning of Metro services till July this year, with a daily average of 364,779 passengers from January to July this year. However, the Red Line is used more by passengers than the Green Line. The average number of passengers using the Red Line daily reached 236,044 from January to July, against 128,735 commuters on the Green Line in the same period. Mohammed Al Mudharreb, Director of Rail Operation at the Roads and Transport Authority’s Rail Agency, ascribed the violations committed by passengers to a lack of culture of optimal use of the services though the RTA had distributed booklets and leaflets containing information and guidelines on the terms that should be followed inside the trains and stations to maintain the safety of passengers and trains. The booklets also contained a detailed explanation of the types of violations and fines applicable in this regard. Al Mudharreb pointed out that eating and drinking in prohibited areas was the most common violation, followed by moving in a carriage other than the allowed one like people travelling in the Gold carriage when they had only Silver cards and men travelling in carriages meant for women and children. The BurJuman (Khalid bin Al Waleed) Metro Station, which is one of the two transfer stations where the Red and Green lines intersect, was the most used station by passengers since it is near the popular trading shops and residential areas. The average daily number of passengers who used the BurJuman Metro Station from January to July came to 23,000 followed by Al Ittihad (Union) Metro Station which is the other transfer station. The Union station, he said, was characterised by being close to the business hub in Dubai. It saw an average of 20,000 passengers daily during that period, while the Deira City Centre Station witnessed a daily average of 18,000 passengers. The Nakheel Harbour and Tower Station was the least used station with only 618 on average daily from January to July since it is far away from residential and commercial areas, followed by the Etisalat station with 1,911 passengers using it daily during that period. The RTA operates 79 trains now — 62 on the Red Line and 17 on the Green Line. news@khaleejtimes.com Continue reading