Wen also said: “China is willing to continue playing a constructive role in promoting peaceful resolution of the Iranian nuclear issue.”
Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Ma Zhaoxu, speaking at a later news conference, gave no further details of any discussion between Wen and Rahimi about the nuclear dispute.
But Rahimi said Iran hoped to keep expanding economic and energy ties with China, Ma told reporters. Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, also in Beijing for the meeting of the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation, warned on Wednesday against intimidating Iran and said talk of sanctions over its nuclear program was “premature.”
Putin was speaking after US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton failed to secure any specific assurances from Russia on Iran during talks in Moscow. Wen’s comments left little doubt that China wanted to keep at arm’s length possible Western demands for stiffer sanctions. “The Sino-Iran relationship has witnessed rapid development ... and cooperation in trade and energy has widened and deepened,” Wen told Rahimi, according to Xinhua.
Last month, Iran said it was building a hitherto undisclosed second uranium enrichment facility, drawing warnings from the West that Tehran had to come clean about its activities, which critics say could give it the means to assemble atomic weapons. Iran says its nuclear activities are for peaceful ends and that it complies with international nuclear rules. China has voiced concern about the enrichment plant, but urged nations to solve the latest flare-up through negotiations.
Growing energy ties bind China, the world’s No. 2 crude oil consumer, and Iran, which has the world’s second-largest crude oil reserves but needs investment to develop them. Iranian oil made up nearly 12 percent of China’s crude imports last year. Beijing’s distaste for sanctions and appetite for Iran’s oil mean it could use its power as a permanent member of the Security Council to soften any proposed resolution on the dispute.
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| BERİL DEDEOĞLU | ![]() |
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| Yemen and beyond | |||
| ABDULLAH BOZKURT | ![]() |
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| Turkey and Mexico: Distant yet so close | |||
| ABDÜLHAMİT BİLİCİ | ![]() |
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| Google kidnaps Gül! | |||
| İHSAN YILMAZ | ![]() |
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| The Egyptian elections, Islam and Islamists | |||
| MARKAR ESAYAN | ![]() |
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| There is need for a new initiative | |||
| EMRE USLU | ![]() |
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| Operational errors | |||
| HASAN KANBOLAT | ![]() |
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| Are Russian tourists being discouraged from visiting Turkey? | |||
| CHARLOTTE MCPHERSON | ![]() |
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| The modern ‘Great Game’: women’s role and status | |||
| KLAUS JURGENS | ![]() |
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| Back to the ’80s | |||
| KATHY HAMILTON | ![]() |
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| Random acts of violence | |||
| MERVE BÜŞRA ÖZTÜRK | ![]() |
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| Adding insult to injury in Uludere | |||
| NICOLE POPE | ![]() |
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| Shifting responsibility | |||
| YAVUZ BAYDAR | ![]() |
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| ‘Errorism’ | |||
| ORHAN MİROĞLU | ![]() |
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| ‘Strategic vision’ | |||
| ORHAN KEMAL CENGİZ | ![]() |
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| Turkey through Amnesty International’s eyes | |||
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