Irans Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif has urged cooperation between regional countries to establish peace and security in the Middle East.
If the countries in the region do not cooperate to establishsecurity in the region, theywill have to live in a volatile region,Zarif said in an exclusiveinterview with Lebanese al-Mayadeen satellite TV station in the Swiss city of Geneva on Monday.
The top Iranian diplomat stressed that the time when security could be bought has gone, and today cooperation is needed to establish security in the region.
Iran is ready to cooperate with other regional countries to resolve the issues of the Middle East, Zarif said, stressingthat security and peace mustbe established in the countries in the region.
He also referred to the crisis in Syria, saying that certain regional countries are providing logistic, military and financial support for terrorist groups operating against the Syrian government.
The Iranian foreign minister further said that only a comprehensive politicalsolution based on the Syrian peoples demandscan end the crisis in the country.
Syria has been beset by a deadly conflict Since March 2011 which according to the so-called Syrian Observatory for human Rights has lead to the death of over 222,000 people to date.
Pointing to the conflict in Yemen, Zarif called for a cessation of the Saudi airstrikes against Yemen and the implementation of a truce in the impoverished Arab country.
He stressed that instability in Yemen and Saudi Arabiais not in favor ofIran.
Zarif also said that Iran is holding consultations with some regional countries including Oman, Pakistan and Turkey to resolve the conflict in Yemen.
[caption id="" align="alignnone" width="555"] Smoke billows into the sky following a Saudi air assault in the east of the Yemeni capital, Sanaa, on May 29, 2015. (AFP photo)[/caption]
Riyadh began hitting Yemen on March 26 without a UN mandate and with the aim of restoring power to Yemens fugitive former President Abd Rabbu Mansour Hadi, who is a close ally of Riyadh. The ongoing crisis in the Arab country has claimed the lives of approximately 2,000 people and displaced more than 500,000, according to the UN.