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China refused new U.N. sanctions on Iran

UNITED NATIONS — China’s UN ambassador said Tuesday that the time was not right for new sanctions against Iran over its refusal to halt sensitive nuclear fuel work, and urged more time for a diplomatic solution.

Chinese Ambassador to the United Nations, Zhang Yesui

“This is not the right moment for sanctions,” said, Zhang Yesui, who chairs the UN Security Council this month. He stressed that current diplomatic efforts to find a peaceful settlement “still need some more time and patience,” echoing a view expressed by the Chinese foreign ministry in Beijing.

Zhang said sanctions themselves “are not an end” and a diplomatic solution “would be the best option.”

In Beijing, foreign ministry spokesman Jiang Yu meanwhile told reporters: “We believe that dialogue and negotiation are the proper way to resolve the Iran nuclear issue.”

“We still have room for diplomatic efforts and we hope all parties will adopt more flexible and pragmatic policies to enhance the diplomatic efforts so as to promote an early resumption of talks,” he added.

The Chinese statements came after the United States on Monday said “the door is still open” for Iran to meet world demands on its nuclear aims, but warned it was discussing with its allies the “next steps,” which could include sanctions.

Tehran has dismissed a US-set deadline of December 31 to agree to a UN-brokered nuclear fuel swap deal and instead issued the West a one-month “ultimatum” expiring January 31 to accept a counter-proposal.

Originally, the United States, Britain, France and Germany had favored tougher new sanctions that would target Iran’s energy sector but diplomats said Russia and China made clear they would never support such steps.

U.S. officials, congressional aides and diplomats said last month they feared broad-based sanctions against Iran could undermine the country’s protest movement and pressed instead for measures targeting the Iranian leadership.

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said on Monday the United States believed new sanctions were necessary to pressure Iran and its Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps to curb Tehran’s nuclear programs without hurting ordinary people. (AFP)

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