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 Iranian officials have said his election victory on Tuesday showed the American people's desire for fundamental change in domestic and foreign policy from the policies of Bush.

A senior Iranian official called on U.S. President-elect Barack Obama on Thursday to show goodwill and remove sanctions against the Islamic Republic, an Iranian news agency reported.

Obama has said he would harden sanctions but has also held out the possibility of direct talks with the United States to solve issues.

"Through the lifting of the past government's cruel sanctions against Iran, Barack Obama can demonstrate his goodwill to the Iranian people," Prosecutor-General Ayatollah Qorban-Ali Dori-Najafabadi said.

"Calling for forgiveness and remorse for the past U.S. government's deeds by the new government can bring about the great Iranian nation's forgiveness," the Mehr News Agency quoted him as saying in the northwestern city of Tabriz.

The United States cut diplomatic ties with Iran after its Islamic Revolution in 1979 and is spearheading a drive to isolate the country over its nuclear activities.

Tehran says its nuclear enrichment programme aims at produce civilian energy. The West claims Iran's study is intended to build atomic weapons.

Iranian officials have rejected world powers' demand that it halt uranium enrichment, a process that can have civilian and military uses, in exchange for trade and other benefits.

Obama, like current U.S. President George W. Bush, has not ruled out military action although he has criticised the outgoing administration for not pushing diplomacy and engagement with Iran.

Iranian officials have said his election victory on Tuesday showed the American people's desire for fundamental change in domestic and foreign policy from the policies of Bush, who labelled Iran part of an "axis of evil".

The head of the Iranian parliament's national security and foreign policy commission said any change in Iran's strategy towards Washington would depend on a change in the U.S. approach, the official IRNA news agency reported.

"As long as the U.S. policy toward Iran stays the way it currently is, negotiations with that country will have no meaning," Alaeddin Boroujerdi said in the city of Mashad.

Reuters

 
Home arrow News Headlines arrow Warning: The Gaza power station will stop
Warning: The Gaza power station will stop PDF Print E-mail
Tuesday, 15 April 2008

Kanaan Obeid, the deputy head of the Palestinian energy authority in the Gaza Strip warned Monday that the power station will stop working during the coming 24 hours if necessary quantities of fuel were not allowed in Gaza, adding that a complete power outage will result in total paralysis of all service sectors in the Strip. 

In a press release, Obeid stated that the Israeli promises to supply the station with necessary fuel on Tuesday are unreliable verbal promises in light of the policy of manipulation practiced by the IOA.

For his part, MP Jamal Al-Khudari, the head of the popular committee against the siege, appealed, from the heart of suffering in Gaza, to all presidents, kings, princes and officials in the world to rescue the Gaza people from the risks that would ravage their lives in the coming days.

Khudari warned that the Israeli occupation prevents the entry of any kind of fuel even the slashed quantities to Gaza for the fifth consecutive day.

In another context, the popular committee against the siege announced Monday morning that a Palestinian young woman called Suha Al-Jamasi, 22, died of cancer as a result of complete lack of cancer medicines in the besieged Gaza Strip; thus, her death increased the death toll of the siege victims to 133 Palestinian patients.

 

Last Updated ( Wednesday, 18 June 2008 )
 

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