Iran hopes for end to 'misunderstandings' with Saudi Arabia

Iranian foreign minister says his country regards Saudi Arabia as an important country in the region.


Afp July 22, 2011
Iran hopes for end to 'misunderstandings' with Saudi Arabia

TEHRAN: Iranian Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi said on Friday that he hoped "misunderstandings" with Saudi Arabia could be resolved after a war of words erupted over its military intervention in Bahrain.

Saleh said that Iran respected the sovereignty of Sunni-ruled Shia-majority Bahrain and hoped that a national dialogue launched by King Hamad after the March crackdown on Shia-led protests would bear fruit.

"We have no particular problem with Saudi Arabia and we regard it as an important country in the region that has influence in international affairs," Salehi said in an interview with the official IRNA news agency.

"We have had friendly relations with Saudi Arabia for a long time. After recent events in the region there were differences of analysis and interpretation," he said without elaborating.

"I believe these misunderstandings can be resolved. I hope that we will find an acceptable way to continue consultations between our two countries."

Salehi's overture to Saudi Arabia came after a sharp downturn in relations in the months since Saudi-led troops intervened to help Bahrain's Sunni rulers put down the Shia-led protests.

Several Iranian officials and Shia clerics have spoken out against the intervention, drawing an angry response from Gulf Arab states.

Salehi inisted that Iran "respects the national sovereignty and independence of Bahrain and wants peace, stability and security in Bahrain."

"We think that the Bahrain issue needs to be settled between Bahrainis," he said.

"We have political relations with the government of Bahrain and we regard as positive the decision by the king of Bahrain to launch a dialogue with the people. We hope that this dialogue will allow a solution to be found."

Iran received a formal protest note from the six-nation Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) on Monday after senior Iranian cleric Ayatollah Ahmed Janati used a sermon at the main weekly prayers in Tehran on July 8 to criticise the Bahrain crackdown and dismiss the dialogue as a "ploy."

Janati said that the protesters in Bahrain had done nothing more than call for "one person, one vote," and hit out at the prosecution of doctors and academics for their part in the protests.

GCC secretary general Abdullatif Zayani said Janati's comments were "provocative and false," and constituted  "blatant and unacceptable interference" in Bahrain's internal affairs.

In a major blow to the national dialogue, Bahrain's main Shia opposition bloc, the Islamic National Accord Association (Al-Wefaq), which took a majority of the vote in the last parliamentary elections, announced on Sunday that it was pulling out, saying the talks were not aimed at achieving serious results.

COMMENTS (4)

Imran | 13 years ago | Reply

Every one knows that it’s the western plan to blow the sectarian and ethnic division among the Muslims and erupting differences among them on petty issues. I think Saudi Arabia and Iran are running on the way, on what the West wants. So they should leave this way, sit together and seek acceptable way for solution the Bahrain and Syria problems.

kulamarva balakrishna | 13 years ago | Reply

Vienna,22-07-2011 I had said on my previous comment President Zardari visited Tehran with Interior Minister Malik to help Iran and sand land kingdom of Saudi Arabia come closer.The Foreign Minister goes public now to back up the signals sent through Pakistan.That is all. Saudis can not come closer to Iran and displease the U.S. which has set Middle Eastern Muslim states aflame with the exception of Saudi Arabia, which is both encouragement and warning. --Kulamarva Balakrishna

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