Iran news headlines on Saturday include resumption ofEgypt-Iran direct flights after decades;Kuwaiti Foreign Ministerdescribing Iran as a major and influential player inMideast; Iraq tightening control ofIran flights to Syria;continuation ofIndia's Iran oil imports and rise of Turkish gold export to Iran.
The flight by a private Egyptian airliner, owned by the business tycoon Rami Lakah, took off with eight Iranians on board, marking the operation of a direct air route between the two countries.
During a meeting with his Iranian counterpart Ali Akbar Salehi on the sidelines of the 11th ministerial meeting of the Asia Cooperation Dialogue (ACD) in the Tajik capital, Dushanbe, on Friday, he stated that meetings and negotiations between Kuwaiti and Iranian officials were greatly beneficial to the ties between Kuwait City and Tehran.
Government spokesman Ali al-Moussawi said Iraq would conduct more random searches to check for weapons heading for the forces of Syrian President Bashar Assad or rebels seeking to topple his regime.
India not to halt imports from Iran
Notwithstanding the tightening of sanctions by US and European Union (EU), India does not intend to halt imports of crude oil from Iran. Instead the government is working on a scheme to insure oil import shipments from the Islamic nation to maintain smooth supply of energy supplies and also expand trade in other commodities.
The Petroleum and Natural Gas Minister, Veerappa Moily had earlier this week stated that India had no intentions to put a halt to imports from Iran.
Turkey gold exports to Iran resume despite tough US sanctions
Turkeyexported almost $120 million worth of gold toIranin February, data showed, suggesting the two countries trade of gold fornatural gashas resumed despite tighter U.S. sanctions, though at levels below last years peaks.
U.S. officials have sought to prevent Turkish gold exports from providing a financial lifeline to Tehran, which has been largely frozen out of the global banking system by Western sanctions over its nuclear programme.
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