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UK Tories hope for better UK-Iran ties, says shadow minister

By IRNA,

London : Shadow Foreign Office Minister David Lidington hopes that a future Conservative government in Britain would lead to better relations between London and Tehran.

The 52-year old Tory MP, who has recently returned from a visit to Tehran, was also hopeful of an improvement in US-Iran relations following recent overtures made by Washington, including possibility of opening an American interests office in Tehran.

“Iran is a significant power in the region. It is a country with a rich cultural history and a sense of its national identity that goes back over many centuries,” Lidington said.

“It’s a serious country in world affairs and also a country with a very young population with ambitions for economic advance,” he said.

In an interview with IRNA, the shadow minister said he “would hope” that a Conservative government would have better relations with Iran after the next general elections, which is due in less than two years and the opposition party are favourites to win.

“There are tremendous opportunities for better economic, educational and cultural relations between United Kingdom and Iran,” he said.

But Lidington also cautioned that “the extent to which we can achieve that improvement in relations does I think depend overwhelmingly on getting the nuclear issue resolved.”

“I would hope that we could see an improvement not just in relations between Iran and the United Kingdom but also between Iran and the United States,” he added.

The Conservative MP said that he was surprised about what he found during his first visit to Iran last month, when he led a British parliamentary delegation.

“I think the first reaction would be to say it was the people of Iran that I found much more friendly than I had expected. I found the mood on the streets in Tehran was more relaxed than I had expected to see,” he said.

Regarding the nuclear issue, Lidington said that he spent a lot of time discussing it with the Iranian officials and politicians and that he agreed “Iran under the NPT has the right to civilian nuclear energy.”

“The fact that the Iranian nuclear program was begun secretly which of course has set things off on the basis that meant there was a lack of trust on both sides which is right at the very bottom of our problems at the moment,” he said.

“We have to search for a way in which Iran can continue with the civil nuclear program which it is entitled to have and which it needs for it own energy policy while providing the safeguards that the rest of the worlds wants,” the MP suggested.

As an answer, he believed that if Iran once again adopted the additional protocol to the NPT it would help to regain trust, even though nothing was gained when Tehran previously allowed unannounced insections of its facilities for more than two years.

“If Iran were to make a political gesture in saying that we will apply the additional protocol of the NPT, I think that would be a very significant move forward,” Lidington said.

The ‘freeze for freeze’ option that was proposed in Geneva, he also said was “a good starting point for negotiations. I very much hope that we see move forward on that front.”
The shadow foreign secretary dismissed suggestions that recent British moves to impose further EU sanctions against Iran was not conducive to improving relations and encouraging Iran to further cooperate.

“Sanctions against Bank Melli and other financial institutions, this is something that we have supported the Labour government over not because we want to harm Iran’s financial services for the sake of it,” he said, insisting they were specific to the nuclear issue.

“There are enormous opportunities for British business to develop in Iran. So no sane British government wants to have these sanctions for longer than is necessary, the sanctions are there as a measure of how seriously we take the nuclear issue,” Lidington argued.

In his wide-ranging interview, the shadow minister suggested that Britain and Iran could work more closely together in combating drugs in Afghanistan at a time when UK troops are deployed there to restore security and help develop the country.

“I think Britain and Iran have a common interest in trying to reverse the trend towards greater reliance on drugs trade within Afghanistan,” he said.

This, the MP said, was certainly something that his party had said repeatedly in parliament that the “coalition forces with Afghanistan need to achieve a much better coordination between the military efforts on the ground and the subsequent reconstruction,”
“It is a fair criticism to say that for ordinary Afghan families if they don’t find that there is an alternative way of making a living to growing opium poppies and they find that they can’t get crops irrigated and then sent to market,” he said.

“I very much hope that we can rebuild the cooperation between UK and Iran in combating drug trafficking. Certainly when I met the British ambassador to Iran at his embassy, this was something that he said to me he would be keen to do,” he added.

Lidington also believed that Iran had a positive role to play in the redevelopment of Iraq following the US-UK war to overthrow Saddam Hussein’s regime.

“Good relations between these two powerful neighbours are very, very important,” he stressed.

“Running Iraq is going to be a very challenging job to put it mildly and I think Mr Maliki deserves support from all his neighbours in trying to help bring stability and then hopefully prosperity to that country,” he said.

The shadow minister also confirmed that British troops did not want to stay any longer than necessary in Iraq and that the present Labour government or a future Conservative one would be “guided very much by the judgement of our military commanders on the ground.”