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NUKEWARS
Tweets, bellowing car horns and nuclear hope in Iran
By Arthur MACMILLAN
Tehran (AFP) April 3, 2015


Joyful Iranians dance into night after nuclear breakthrough
Tehran (AFP) April 2, 2015 - Hundreds of Iranians took to the streets in Tehran early Friday to celebrate a breakthrough in talks with the West that may end the country's 12-year-long nuclear crisis.

The capital's longest street, Val-e-Asr Avenue, was lined with cars as drivers sounded their horns in approval of a framework deal intended to lead to a comprehensive agreement with world powers in June.

"Whatever the final result of the negotiations, we are winners," 30-year-old Behrang Alavi said on Val-e-Asr at around 1:00 am as the noise reverberated around him.

"Now we will be able to live normally like the rest of the world," he said, as people flashed V-signs for victory and danced while waving white handkerchiefs in a traditional Iranian celebration.

The scenes came after Iran's Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif said key parameters of the framework for a deal had been agreed with the West, paving the way for a final deal by June 30.

It marks a major step to address the West's concerns that Iran wants to build a nuclear bomb, with curbs being placed on Tehran's nuclear programme.

In exchange Iran will see sanctions that have hobbled its economy being removed upon verification that the nuclear programme is peaceful.

US President Barack Obama welcomed the "historic understanding" with the Islamic republic but cautioned that more work needed to be done before a deal can be sealed.

It was a single message on Twitter that began to raise expectations that the agonising wait would be worth it, as families gathered around their televisions looking for news.

The feeling soon turned into joyful scenes in Tehran, with people dancing on the streets in the early hours of Friday as car horns blared and Iranians spoke of their hopes for a different future.

"Whatever the final result of the negotiations, we are winners," said Behrang Alavi, a 30-year-old actor, on Val-e-Asr Avenue at around 1:00 am as the noise reverberated around him on the capital's longest street.

"Now we will be able to live normally like the rest of the world," he added, as people flashed V-signs for victory and waved white handkerchiefs in the air in a traditional Iranian celebration.

It was Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif who had signalled a breakthrough was at hand after eight days of around-the-clock nuclear talks in Switzerland.

"Found solutions. Ready to start drafting immediately," Zarif wrote in his first post in five days on Twitter, which despite officially being banned is accessed by millions of Iranians using illegal software.

Minutes later pictures and his words in Farsi flowed into living rooms in the capital, announcing live that there was now a framework to end a 12-year crisis that has seen sanctions ravage Iran's economy and bring hardship to millions.

A June 30 agreement that would lift the sanctions in exchange for curbs and stringent international monitoring designed to ensure Iran cannot develop an atomic bomb is now tantalisingly within reach.

- Selfies with Obama -

Fatemeh Hashemian, 26, said she wanted a nuclear deal to help foreigners see her country in a better light.

"I wish Iran could make progress like this everyday and have no more sanctions imposed on the country," she said.

"I hope that this wrong image of Iran will be erased. And that our relations with the world can improve."

In a sign of the mooted agreement's potentially enormous historical impact, Iranian state television screened US President Barack Obama's televised address live, with translation in Farsi.

As Obama was speaking, young Iranians took selfies with the president in the background and posted the pictures on Twitter.

But although there was hope, some Iranians said they wouldn't be convinced that anything would change until a deal is signed and sealed.

"It's not clear until we can see it in action," said Reza Riahizadeh, a 39-year-old engineer who was watching at home on television with his family.

"They might dodge cancelling the sanctions. No one knows. Nothing is certain until it is done in reality."

But Hassan Khudiarah, a 38-year-old taxi driver waiting for a fare halfway through a shift that would not end until 7.00 am, was more optimistic.

"It is a very good step for us," he said as fellow drivers stepped out of their cars to share the news at Argentine Square in downtown Tehran.

"I hope one day our problems will end and we will be treated as a friend by those who don't seem to like us, but don't know us. We don't want conflict."


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NUKEWARS
Nuclear sanctions on Iran to be lifted if it meets deal
Lausanne (AFP) April 2, 2015
A raft of biting global sanctions imposed on Iran for its suspect nuclear activities will be lifted over time, if the Islamic republic sticks to the terms of a final deal with global powers. Under a framework struck Thursday, the US and EU will lift all nuclear-related sanctions after the UN atomic watchdog, the IAEA, has verified that Iran has taken key steps laid out in the final comprehen ... read more


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