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NUKEWARS
Defiant Ahmadinejad wins backing of four LatAm allies
by Staff Writers
Quito (AFP) Jan 13, 2012


China knocks US sanctions on state-run firm over Iran
Shanghai (AFP) Jan 15, 2012 - China has criticised the United States for imposing sanctions on a state-run oil firm for exporting petroleum products to Iran, saying the move was "without reason".

Washington on Thursday slapped sanctions on China's Zhuhai Zhenrong Co., barring it from doing business in the United States, saying it brokered delivery of more than $500 million worth of gasoline to Iran from July 2010-January 2011.

"We express strong dissatisfaction and firm opposition to this," foreign ministry spokesman Liu Weimin said in a statement carried by the official Xinhua news agency late Saturday.

The sanctions, also placed on companies from Singapore and the United Arab Emirates, bar the three firms from receiving US export licenses, trade support from the US Export Import Bank, and loans over $10 million from US financial institutions.

Liu said China's cooperation with Iran was similar to other countries.

"Like many other countries, China maintains normal cooperation with Iran in energy, economic and trade fields," he said, adding that the US had acted unilaterally to impose the sanctions.

"This is without reason, and against the content and spirit of resolutions by the United Nations Security Council on the Iran nuclear issue."

Chinese state media Saturday quoted the company as dismissing the US claims as "fiction", with an official saying the firm doesn't export refined oil to Iran.

The US sanctions came shortly after US Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner met Chinese leaders in Beijing to ask for help in squeezing Iran's key oil revenues and pushing Tehran to halt its nuclear ambitions.

But China, long an important buyer of Iranian oil, has resisted adding its weight to the US and European campaign.

Chinese officials have warned against making links between China's trade relations with Iran and the issue of Tehran's nuclear program.

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad headed for home on Friday after achieving his goal of securing the backing of four Latin American allies in his country's nuclear standoff with the West.

The Iranian leader left Quito aboard an Ecuadoran Air Force plane bound for the southwestern city of Guayaquil from where he was to fly back to his native soil.

In Quito, he defiantly vowed to resist escalating Western pressure to stop his country's alleged efforts to develop atomic weapons.

"They (the West) have decided to step up their pressure on us. They insult our country and our people. It's clear that the Iranian people will resist," he told reporters.

"The international community knows that hegemonic (Western) powers do not support the progress of independent peoples. The Iran problem is not the nuclear program, the Iran problem is the progress and independence," he added.

Washington has been leading a campaign to bring Tehran's economy to its knees by slapping sanctions on its oil exports, a crucial source of income.

President Barack Obama last month signed a law targeting Iran's central bank, which clears most of the oil payments, and US envoys have been fanning out in recent days to convince other nations to come on board or risk seeing their firms barred from doing business in America.

The UN Security Council has already approved four rounds of sanctions on Iran for refusing to halt uranium enrichment.

Ahmadinejad's five-day tour was conceived to shore up his support in Venezuela, Nicaragua, Cuba and Ecuador.

All four countries have frosty ties with the United States, and their leaders have in the past four years made numerous Tehran visits to build up diplomatic and business links while relations with Washington have worsened.

Ahmadinejad's trip, however, was overshadowed by Wednesday's killing of an Iranian nuclear scientist, which Tehran blamed on Israeli and US intelligence.

Mostafa Ahmadi Roshan, a deputy director of Iran's main uranium enrichment plant, was given a funeral service in north Tehran after noon prayers Friday.

Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, said the "abominable" and "cowardly" killing was committed "with the planning or support of the intelligence services of the CIA and Mossad" of the United States and Israel.

And he vowed that Tehran would "continue with determination" its nuclear activities, which Western governments suspect mask a drive for atomic weapons capability despite repeated denials.

Iran, however, said Thursday it stood ready to resume talks on its suspect nuclear activities with the five permanent members of the UN Security Council, plus Germany.

And diplomats in Vienna said the UN nuclear watchdog IAEA was to send its chief inspector and deputy director to Iran for a week from January 28 to discuss the country's nuclear activities.

Although the United States last week warned Latin American states against deepening their ties with Iran, Ahmadinejad won support from the presidents of Venezuela, Nicaragua, Cuba and Ecuador to peacefully develop nuclear energy.

Ecuadoran President Rafael Correa, who met for five hours with Ahmadinejad Thursday, denounced a recent IAEA report that found "credible" evidence that Iran had engaged in activity relevant to developing a nuclear explosive device.

"How can we accept these kinds of reports?" Correa said. "The report concluded, in quotes, that Iran was developing nuclear weapons, something it has always denied, and we believe them."

Ecuador was one of only two countries on the Vienna-based IAEA's 32-member board of governors to vote against a subsequent resolution condemning Iran's nuclear activity. The other country was Cuba.

"Iran can count on the total support of Ecuador so that the truth is known and not just the propaganda of countries which show a shameful double standard," Correa said.

During his stop in Cuba, Ahmadinejad met with President Raul Castro as well as with his 85-year-old brother and revolutionary icon Fidel Castro.

A joint statement issued by Raul Castro and Ahmadinejad highlighted the "right of all nations to the peaceful use of nuclear energy," in an implicit swipe at the Western pressure on Iran.

The Iranian leader earlier visited Venezuela and Nicaragua.

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