
Senior officials representing Iran and six major powers on Tuesday started a meeting designed to push for a final deal regarding Iran's thorny nuclear issue.
The meeting, comprising senior officials of Iran and "P5+1" group (the US, Britain, France, Russia, China plus Germany), is designed to follow up on results of the closed-door meetings that grouped US Secretary of State John Kerry, Iranian Foreign Minister Mhammad Javad Zarif and the EU foreign policy chief, Catherine Ashton, over the past two days.
An Omani diplomatic source indicated to KUNA that the new round of the Omani-hosted talks was aimed at reaching a final deal on the issue or delaying it till November 18, when the negotiations among the parties would resume.
The officials, during the Oman-hosted talks, are discussing "detailed topics obstructing course of the discussions," ahead of the final agreement, the source said, adding that the three parties thrashed out some differences on uranium enrichment, but the major hurdle remained Tehran's demand for total lift of the international sanctions, while the Western side favored their gradual removal.
Oman had played a mediation role in talks at this level in middle of 2014.
GMT 09:34 2018 Thursday ,04 January
S. Korea well prepared if N. Korea attends OlympicsGMT 10:16 2017 Monday ,18 December
Palestinian refugees resist from the sidelinesGMT 17:53 2017 Wednesday ,25 October
Israel approves 176 settlement homes for east JerusalemGMT 08:57 2017 Thursday ,19 October
Israel approves over 2,600 settler homes this week: NGOGMT 07:55 2017 Wednesday ,18 October
Israel says no talks with Palestinian govt that includes armed HamasGMT 15:08 2017 Monday ,16 October
Israel approves Hebron settlement plans for first time since 2002GMT 15:56 2017 Wednesday ,11 October
Israel to advance plans for nearly 4,000 settler homes: officialGMT 09:17 2017 Monday ,21 August
Group of Gazan children get first glimpse of Jerusalem


Maintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2025 ©
Maintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2025 ©