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Iran’s foreign minister says yes to William Hague

 

Gavin Cordon
Sunday 15 September 2013 17:38 EDT
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Foreign Secretary William Hague is to meet the Iranian foreign minister in a sign of a possible thaw in relations with Tehran following the election of new President Hassan Rouhani. The Foreign Office said the meeting with Mohammad Javad Zarif would take place in the margins of the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) in New York later this month.

However officials were taken by surprise by a statement on Mr Rouhani’s English language Twitter feed that the meeting would be with the Iranian president himself. It stated: “Tehran has responded positively to UK’s request. President Rouhani’s meeting with William Hague on the sidelines of UNGA has been confirmed.”

A Foreign Office spokeswoman said that there had been no formal request for a meeting between Mr Hague and Mr Rouhani.

“If we were to receive a request, we would be happy to decide on it,” the spokeswoman said. Officials will hope that the apparent diplomatic mix-up does not complicate attempts to reach out to the new president, seen as a moderate in Iranian terms.

Britain has not had a diplomatic presence in Iran since November 2011 when its embassy in Tehran was stormed by a mob.

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