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Two killed in Lebanon as Palestinian named as suicide bomber

By - Feb 20,2014 - Last updated at Feb 20,2014

TRIPOLI/BEIRUT — Two people were killed in the Lebanese city of Tripoli on Thursday including a military commander from the Alawite minority shot dead on his way to work, security sources said, the latest spasm of violence linked to the Syrian civil war.

In Beirut, a Palestinian man was named as one of two suicide bombers who blew themselves up near the Iranian cultural centre in the capital’s southern suburbs on Wednesday, killing at least four other people in other Syria-related violence.

The three-year-long civil war in neighbouring Syria has exacerbated tensions in Lebanon between groups sympathetic to the rival sides, posing a major security challenge to a new government that is seeking to stabilise the fragile state.

In Tripoli, the Syria war has fuelled tensions between Alawites loyal to Syrian President Bashar Al Assad’s government and Sunni Muslim groups sympathetic to the uprising against him. Assad is also an Alawite, a religion derived from Shiite Islam.

On Thursday morning, gunmen killed Abdel Rahman Youssef, a military leader in the pro-Syrian Arab Democratic Party from Tripoli’s Jabal Mohsen district, a day after three other people were wounded in clashes, security and party sources said.

The other man killed was Sunni, the sources said, the circumstances of his death were not immediately clear.

The city, Lebanon’s second largest, was tense after the shooting, with schools shutting their doors and many people keeping away from sites of potential clashes, a witness said.

The twin suicide bomb attack in Beirut on Wednesday was the seventh such bombing in the city’s predominantly Shiite Muslim southern suburbs since last July.

A Sunni militant group claimed responsibility for the attack, describing it as a reprisal for the intervention of Hizbollah and Iran in Syria.

Investigators used DNA samples to identify one of the suicide bombers as Nidal Al Mugheyir, a Palestinian man who security sources said was in his early 20s and had been a follower of hardline Lebanese Sunni cleric Ahmad Al Asir.

Mugheyir was a resident of the mainly Shiite village of Beisareya in southern Lebanon, where villagers torched his family home on Wednesday following reports he was behind the bomb attack.

Syria to miss chemical destruction deadline — sources

By - Feb 20,2014 - Last updated at Feb 20,2014

THE HAGUE — Syria will miss a UN-backed June 30 deadline to destroy its chemical arsenal, possibly by several months, sources said Thursday, amid growing Western frustration with Damascus’ perceived delays.

With just 11 per cent of Syria’s chemicals out of the country after a series of missed deadlines, an Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) meeting on Friday will hear calls for Syria to do more.

Because of the missed deadlines, Syria has submitted a new 100-day timeframe that sees all its chemicals removed from the country by the last week of May, a source close to the matter told AFP.

The chemicals must then be taken from Syria’s main port Latakia by Western warships to a US vessel, the MV Cape Ray, aboard which they will be broken down at sea using hydrolysis, a process expected to take 90 days.

That would put the destruction well beyond the June 30 deadline agreed by Russia and the US last year as part of a plan to avert US-backed military strikes in the wake of deadly chemical attacks outside Damascus blamed by the West on President Bashar Assad’s regime.

“The Syrians said they could complete getting the agents out of the country by the end of May, that’s unacceptable,” said the source.

The UN Security Council on February 6 called on Syria to move faster, transporting chemicals and agents to Latakia “in a systematic and sufficiently accelerated manner”.

Western diplomats at an OPCW Executive Council meeting last month expressed frustration with the repeatedly delayed process, accusing Syria of unilaterally changing the June 30 destruction deadline into a deadline for the chemicals to have left the country.

“They’re going to be several months over the destruction deadline, but they’re saying if it’s all out of the country by June 30 then so what?” a diplomatic source said.

An OPCW-UN Operational Planning Group has come up with an alternative that would reduce the 100-day Syrian plan by 63 days, but the June 30 deadline would still not be met, said a source close to the matter.

Diplomats nevertheless want to keep the mid-2014 deadline, however unrealistic.

“As long as the June 30 date hasn’t passed, it must be kept as a target,” said the source.

 

 ‘No question of haggling’ 

 

Most countries at the OPCW’s Executive Council are frustrated with the delays, although Russia, China, Iran and India do not want to put more pressure on Damascus, the source said ahead of Friday’s “intense” talks.

“There’s no question of haggling, the deadlines have been agreed and they must be respected,” the source said.

Syria has said it does not have the right material to transport the chemicals and that it has been hampered by the security situation in the war-torn country.

So-called Priority 1 chemicals were supposed to be destroyed by March 31 but “they won’t even be out of Latakia by then”, a diplomatic source said.

Syria is supposed to have completely destroyed its chemical weapon production facilities by March 15, with another OPCW Executive Council meeting to be held before then.

Syria has declared around 700 tonnes of most dangerous chemicals, which were supposed to have left the country by the end of 2013, 500 tonnes of less dangerous precursor chemicals, which were supposed to have left the country by February 5, and around 122 tonnes of isopropanol.

So far just three small shipments have left Latakia, to be taken to Italy and transferred for destruction onto the US ship MV Cape Ray.

Syria’s isopropanol is to be destroyed by March 1, according to the internationally-agreed timetable, and that task is 93 per cent completed, a diplomatic source said, with the remaining 7 per cent “in a currently inaccessible location”.

UN Security Council Resolution 2118 was passed after a massive chemical weapon attack that killed hundreds in several opposition areas around Damascus in August.

Rebels and the regime exchanged blame for that attack.

Kerry, Abbas hold second day of ‘constructive’ talks

By - Feb 20,2014 - Last updated at Feb 20,2014

PARIS — US Secretary of State John Kerry and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas held more than two hours of “constructive” talks on Israeli-Palestinian peace on Thursday, their second session in as many days, a senior US official said.

“As they did last night, they discussed all of the core issues and agreed to stay in close touch over the phone and through their teams on the ground in the coming days and weeks,” said the US official, who spoke on condition of anonymity.

Israeli-Palestinian peace talks resumed on July 29 after a nearly three-year break. At the time, Kerry said: “Our objective will be to achieve a final status agreement over the course of the next nine months.”

As that deadline has approached, US officials appear to have scaled back their ambitions, saying they are trying to forge a “framework for negotiations” as a first step though they still hope to hammer out a full agreement by April 29.

Such a framework could sketch the outlines of an accord to resolve the more than six-decade-old conflict, whose main issues include borders, security, the fate of Palestinian refugees and the status of Jerusalem.

Iran, Britain resume diplomatic ties

By - Feb 20,2014 - Last updated at Feb 20,2014

LONDON — Britain and Iran on Thursday officially resumed diplomatic relations which were severed by London after students stormed its Tehran embassy in November 2011.

“The UK has agreed with Iran that from today bilateral relations will be conducted directly through non-resident charge d’affaires and officials,” a Foreign Office spokesman told AFP.

Britain had ordered the closure of Iran’s embassy in London after shuttering its own in Tehran when hundreds of Islamist students stormed the compound.

The students — protesting against Western sanctions over Tehran’s disputed nuclear programme — ransacked the building as well as the ambassador’s residence in north Tehran.

Since then, the Swedish embassy in Tehran has represented Britain’s interests there, while the Omani embassy in London has done the same for Iran.

The Foreign Office spokesman said: “We will no longer have formal protecting power arrangements in place. This is the next stage of the step-by-step process of taking forward our bilateral relationship with Iran.”

As regards reopening Britain’s embassy in Tehran, he said no decision had been taken.

“We have made it clear that the issue of compensation [for the damage caused] needs to be addressed,” the spokesman said.

A pristine Iranian flag was flying Thursday outside its embassy in the plush Prince’s Gate terrace overlooking London’s Hyde Park, for the first time in more than two years.

The London embassy was officially open again for the first time since 2011 but is not yet operational as no diplomats have been allocated yet.

The six-storey terrace was the scene of the 1980 Iranian embassy siege, when six gunmen stormed the building, taking hostages. It ended five days later with a British special forces raid.

Around 400,000 Iranians live in Britain.

UAE lets passengers go after airline smoke probe

By - Feb 20,2014 - Last updated at Feb 20,2014

DUBAI — Emirati security authorities have allowed all passengers on an Etihad Airways flight that had suspicious lavatory fires to leave after several were temporarily detained for questioning by police, the airline said Thursday.

Passengers on board the Boeing 777-300ER flight from Melbourne, Australia, to the United Arab Emirates capital of Abu Dhabi said Tuesday’s fires sent smoke into the cabin and appeared to have been deliberately set.

Smoke was detected in two toilets after takeoff from Melbourne on Monday, prompting a precautionary diversion to Jakarta, Indonesia, and again in a toilet as the plane made its way to its destination of Abu Dhabi, according to the government-backed airline.

None of the 254 passengers and crew was removed from the flight in Indonesia. Several passengers said that decision was unnerving given the fears that the fires were started by someone on board.

Twelve people were detained upon arrival in Abu Dhabi as authorities investigated the case. A young woman who had attracted the suspicions of some passengers was among those initially detained, witnesses said.

“The real story is: Who was the idiot woman trying to burn a plane down, and why,” passenger Mark Sinclair, 45, said by e-mail. “She should be in jail for a very long time.”

The 12 passengers held for additional questioning were offered hotel accommodation but opted to stay together and were kept in the airline’s first-class lounge, according to Etihad. It said consular officials from Australia, the United Kingdom and Ireland visited them.

By Thursday morning, all had been allowed to continue on their journeys.

“In the absence of any conclusive incriminating evidence, no arrests have been made at this time,” the airline said in an e-mailed statement.

Etihad described the investigation as ongoing, and said it is cooperating with authorities.

“We have a zero-tolerance policy in respect to people who threaten the safety and security of passengers and crew or our aircraft,” the airline said.

Officials at the Abu Dhabi police department, which is leading the probe, could not be reached for comment.

The UAE’s aviation regulator, the General Civil Aviation Authority, said it is involved in the investigation and confirmed that no arrests have been made.

Australia’s Civil Aviation Safety Authority (CASA) said Thursday that responsibility for any safety investigation resides with the regulator in the UAE. Any security issues would be investigated by national security agencies, CASA spokesman Peter Gibson said.

CASA expects to be notified of the results of any safety investigation because Etihad has approval to fly into Australia.

“If it involves any safety issues, we would expect to receive some information from Etihad in due course,” Gibson said.

Etihad is the UAE’s national carrier and is based in Abu Dhabi. It and Gulf competitors Emirates and Qatar Airways have been rapidly expanding their operations in recent years, turning their desert bases into major intercontinental transit hubs.

Its Australian destinations are Brisbane, Melbourne and Sydney. It also has a minority stake in Virgin Australia.

Poor turnout in Libyan vote for constitution-drafting body

By - Feb 20,2014 - Last updated at Feb 20,2014

TRIPOLI — Libyans trickled to the polls on Thursday to elect an assembly to draft a constitution, with the paltry turnout reflecting deep political disillusion with the chaos pervading Libya since Muammar Qadhifi’s 42-year rule ended in 2011.

Only 360,000 people had cast ballots by the late afternoon, the election commission said, out of one million who had registered to vote — a number far lower than the three million who had registered before the 2012 parliamentary election.

Live footage from Libyan television cameras in some main polling stations showed mostly empty rooms.

Dawn explosions rocked five polling stations in the eastern town of Derna, an Islamist stronghold, but no one was hurt.

Gunmen forced one Derna voting centre to shut by firing in the air and shouting “voting is haram [forbidden]”, an election official said. Derna polling stations stayed shut and insecurity prevented some voting centres in two other towns from opening.

Nobody claimed responsibility for the Derna attacks but residents said the bombers had scrawled “There is no constitution but Islamic law” on a wall near the scene of one blast, suggesting radical Islamists were responsible.

Prime Minister Ali Zeidan’s government is struggling to assert its authority over militias which helped topple Qadhafi but kept their weapons and have become major political players.

Two of the strongest militias threatened on Tuesday to dissolve the General National Congress (GNC), the interim parliament, accusing it of paralysing Libya with its endless infighting.

Libya desperately needs a viable government and system of rule so that it can focus on reconstruction and on healing the divisions exposed by the NATO-backed campaign against Qadhafi.

Soldiers guarded polling stations in the capital Tripoli, as helicopters circled overhead. In the eastern city of Benghazi, gunmen threw a bag full of explosives into a voting centre, but the devices did not go off, a security source said.

“God willing, this is the starting point for democracy and freedom, which is what we came for,” Hatem Al Majri said as he voted in Benghazi.

 

Berber boycott

 

The 60-strong constitutional committee, drawn equally from Libya’s three regions of Tripolitania in the west, Cyrenaica in the east and Fezzan in the south, will have 120 days to draft the charter.

Libya used a similar model for the committee that drafted a pre-Qadhafi constitution that was implemented when the country, then a monarchy, gained independence in 1951.

The new document’s authors will need to take into account political and tribal rivalries, as well as demands for more autonomy for the east, when deciding what political system Libya will adopt. Their draft will be put to a referendum.

In the east, armed protesters have occupied major oil ports since the summer to demand a greater share of energy wealth and political autonomy, crippling vital oil exports. The protest group has dismissed Thursday’s vote as fake.

The election was also boycotted by the Amazigh, or Berber, minority which lives in the west near oil installations.

Its leader, Ibrahim Makhlouf, has rejected the vote because the Amazigh wanted a bigger say in the body and guarantees that their tongue will become one of Libya’s official languages.

In the past, Amazigh have backed their demands by blockading oil installations such as the Mellitah oil and gas complex, co-owned by Italy’s ENI, as well as pipelines.

Attempts to write a constitution have been delayed by political infighting in the GNC, elected in July 2012 for an 18-month term in Libya’s first free poll in nearly 50 years.

The GNC agreed this week to hold elections this year after an outcry over its plan to extend its mandate beyond February 7.

Qadhafi ostensibly ruled Libya under a bizarre set of laws prescribed in his Green Book. In practice he and his family ran a totalitarian state where no political opposition was tolerated and rival tribes were paid off or played off against each other.

World powers and Iran make ‘good start’ towards nuclear accord

By - Feb 20,2014 - Last updated at Feb 20,2014

VIENNA — Six world powers and Iran made a “good start” in talks in Vienna towards reaching a final settlement in the decade-old stand-off over Tehran’s nuclear programme, but conceded their plan to get a deal in the coming months was very ambitious.

By late July, Western governments hope to hammer out an accord that would lay to rest their suspicions that Iran is seeking the capability to make a nuclear bomb, an aim it denies, while Tehran wants a lifting of economic sanctions.

Wide differences remain on how this could be achieved, although the two sides said on Thursday they agreed during meetings this week in the Austrian capital on an agenda and timetable for the talks on such an accord.

“We have had three very productive days during which we have identified all of the issues we need to address in reaching a comprehensive and final agreement,” European Union foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton told reporters.

“There is a lot to do. It won’t be easy but we have made a good start,” said Ashton, who speaks on behalf of the United States, Russia, China, France, Britain and Germany.

Senior diplomats from the six nations, as well as Ashton and Iran’s Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif, will meet again on March 17, also in Vienna, and have a series of further discussions ahead of the July deadline.

Tehran denies that its nuclear programme has any latent military purposes and has signalled repeatedly it would resist dismantling its nuclear installations as part of any deal.

“I can assure you that no one had, and will have, the opportunity to impose anything on Iran during the talks,” Zarif told reporters after the Vienna meeting.

A senior US official who asked not to identified cautioned that their exchanges would be “difficult” but the sides were committed to reach a deal soon.

“This will be a complicated, difficult and lengthy process. We will take the time required to do it right,” the official said. “We will continue to work in a deliberate and concentrated manner to see if we can get that job done.”

As part of the diplomatic process, Ashton will go to Tehran for talks on March 9-10.

A diplomatic source clarified that the two sides did not produce a text of the agreed framework for future negotiations or detailed agenda for upcoming meetings, rather only agreeing a broad range of subjects to be addressed in coming months.

While modest in scope, the arrangement is an early step forward in the elusive search for a settlement that could ward off the danger of a wider war in the Middle East, reshape the regional power balance and open up big new trade opportunities with Iran, an oil-producing market of 76 million people.

For Iran, a halt to sanctions imposed by the United States, European governments and the United Nations, would end years of isolation and lift its battered economy.

 

Vast differences

 

The six powers’ overarching goal is to extend the time Iran would need to make enough fissile material and assemble equipment for a nuclear bomb, and to make such a move easier to detect before it became a fait accompli.

They will want to cap uranium enrichment at a low fissile concentration, limit research and development of new nuclear equipment, decommission a substantial portion of Iran’s centrifuges used to refine uranium and allow more intrusive UN non-proliferation inspections.

The Vienna talks followed a groundbreaking interim accord between Iran and the six powers in November under which Tehran suspended higher-level enrichment until late July in return for limited relief from sanctions.

That deal was made possible by the election of relative moderate President Hassan Rouhani, replacing bellicose hardliner Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, a last year on a platform of rebuilding the OPEC member state’s foreign relations.

Iran’s unfinished heavy water Arak reactor, which could yield plutonium for bombs, and its underground Fordow uranium enrichment site will be among key sticking points in the talks.

“We have begun to see some areas of agreement as well as areas in which we will have to work though very difficult issues,” the senior US official said.

The official declined to respond specifically to Iran’s suggestions that its ballistic missile programme, which the West worries could be a way to deliver an atomic bomb to its target, would not be up for negotiation.

“All of the issues of concern to the international community regarding Iran’s nuclear programme are on the table,” the official said. “And all of our concerns must be met in order to get a comprehensive agreement ... Nothing is agreed until everything is agreed.”

Iranian ballistic missile work is banned under UN Security Council sanctions targeting the nuclear programme.

Zarif said, according to the official IRNA news agency: “Nothing except Iran’s nuclear activities will be discussed in the talks with the [six powers], and we have agreed on it.”

A US delegation will be visiting Israel and Saudi Arabia shortly to discuss the negotiations with Iran, the US official. Both countries are upset about signs of a possible Western rapprochement with their common adversary.

Deadly blast rocks Syria border crossing

By - Feb 20,2014 - Last updated at Feb 20,2014

BEIRUT — A powerful explosion ripped through a Syrian border post Thursday near a refugee camp on the border with Turkey, setting cars ablaze and killing at least five people, Syrian opposition activists and Turkish state media said.

The blast believed to have been caused by a car bomb tore through the Bab Al Salama border crossing, also wounding a large number of people who were taken to hospitals in the Turkish town of Kilis across the border. Thousands of people have fled from Aleppo through the border crossing in recent weeks because of the government’s escalated aerial bombardment there.

The exact number of casualties was not immediately clear.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said at least five people were killed, adding that the number was likely to be larger due to the number of wounded people in critical condition.  Nazeer Al Khatib, an activist in Aleppo, said nine people were killed in the car bombing, citing eyewitnesses in the area. Many others were in critical condition, he said.

Turkey’s state-run Anadolu news agency, meanwhile, reported that the explosion killed at least 10 people.

An online video uploaded by activists showed people ferrying casualties, including a young boy, away from the flames as ambulances rushed to the scene. The video appeared genuine and consistent with The Associated Press reporting on the incident.

The Bab Al Salama crossing is controlled by rivals of Al Qaeda breakaway group, the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant. The two sides have engaged in deadly infighting as Al Qaeda splinter group has sought to take over control of the crossing.

Also on Thursday, the relief agency supporting Palestinian refugees resumed food distribution inside the rebel-held district of the Syrian capital that has suffered from crippling shortages of food and medicine for months, a United Nations spokesman said.

The UNRWA announcement comes as Western and Arab nations supporting a UN Security Council resolution demanding immediate access across Syria to deliver desperately needed humanitarian aid called for a vote on the measure this week, even though diplomats say Russia is opposed to key provisions.

Chris Gunness, a spokesman for the UN agency that administers Palestinian refugee camps around the Middle East, said in a statement that the Syrian government granted access for relief workers to enter Yarmouk on Wednesday after an 11-day halt. He said 280 families received food parcels on Wednesday and that workers are preparing to deliver more food to about 18,000 Yarmouk residents on Thursday.

The Yarmouk refugee camp, located in southern Damascus, is one of the hardest-hit opposition enclaves that have been under tight blockades imposed by forces loyal to President Bashar Assad. More than 100 people have died in Yarmouk since mid-2013 as a result of starvation and illnesses exacerbated by hunger or lack of medical aid, according to UN figures.

Supporters of the UN aid resolution said the document had been put in its final form late Wednesday, with a vote likely on Friday. It is unclear whether Moscow will veto the resolution or abstain from the vote.

Russia is supporting Assad’s government in Syria’s nearly three-year-old conflict. The United States and its allies in Europe and the Persian Gulf are backing most of the opposition that is fighting to oust Assad.

The uprising started as peaceful protests against Assad’s rule. It gradually turned into civil war that has increasingly been fought along sectarian lines, pitting predominantly Sunni Muslim rebels against Assad’s government that is dominated by Alawites, a sect in Shiite Islam.

The UN refugee agency said Thursday that it plans to send its largest aid shipment yet to Syria, with more than 43 shipping containers full of relief supplies. The shipment from Dubai in the United Arab Emirates will travel through the Suez Canal before landing in Tartous, Syria, in about two weeks, UNHCR Senior Logistics officer Soliman Daud said.

He declined to say where the aid would be distributed once in Syria, but said the UNHCR is working with partners on the ground such as the Syrian Red Crescent in the western part of the country.

The shipment which includes jerry cans, sleeping mats, blankets and kitchen utensil sets is intended to help up to 187,500 people inside parts of the war-torn country.

“I’m quite sure the need is bigger than what we will send,” Daud told the AP in Dubai.

Also on Thursday, Syrian war planes carried out a series of air strikes on rebel positions outside the southern city of Quinetra as heavy fighting between government troops and rebels raged in the area, activists said.

The Syrian army has been reinforcing its positions in Quinetra as part of an effort to dislodge rebels from the area that is near the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights.

Iran, 6 big powers seek to agree on basis for final nuclear accord

By - Feb 19,2014 - Last updated at Feb 19,2014

VIENNA — Six world powers and Iran strived at a second day of talks in Vienna on Wednesday to map out a broad agenda for reaching an ambitious final settlement to the decade-old standoff over Tehran’s nuclear programme.

The United States, Russia, China, Britain, France and Germany want a long-term agreement on the permissible scope of Iran’s nuclear activities to lay to rest concerns that they could be put to developing atomic bombs. Tehran’s priority is a complete removal of damaging economic sanctions against it.

The negotiations will probably extend at least over several months, and could help defuse years of hostility between energy-exporting Iran and the West, ease the danger of a new war in the Middle East, transform the regional power balance and open up major business opportunities for Western firms.

“The talks are going surprisingly well. There haven’t been any real problems so far,” a senior Western diplomat said, dismissing rumours from the Iranian side that the discussions had run into snags already.

The opening session on Tuesday was “productive” and “substantive”, they said. “The focus was on the parameters and the process of negotiations, the timetable of what is going to be a medium- to long-term process,” one European diplomat said.

“We don’t expect instant results.”

A Wednesday morning session was chaired by a senior European Union diplomat, Helga Schmid, and Iranian Deputy Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi, accompanied by senior diplomats from the six powers.

EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton, who coordinates official contacts with Iran on behalf of the six, was scheduled to attend an extraordinary meeting of EU foreign ministers in Brussels on the Ukraine crisis on Thursday afternoon.

The current Iran talks had originally been expected to run for at least full three days but might be adjourned as early as Thursday morning due to the escalating situation in Ukraine, according to Western diplomats.

The six powers have yet to spell out their precise demands of Iran. But Western officials have signalled they want Iran to cap enrichment of uranium at a low fissile purity, limit research and development of new nuclear equipment and decommission a substantial portion of its centrifuges used to refine uranium.

Such steps, they believe, would help extend the time that Iran would need to produce enough fissile material for a bomb. Tehran says its programme is peaceful and has no military aims.

Highlighting wide differences over expectations in the talks, Araqchi was cited by Iran’s English-language Press TV state television on Tuesday as saying that any dismantling of Iranian nuclear installations would not be up for negotiation.

The talks could also stumble over the future of Iran’s facilities in Arak, an unfinished heavy water reactor that Western states worry could yield plutonium for bombs, and the Fordow uranium enrichment plant, which was built deep underground to ward off any threat of air strikes.

“Iran’s nuclear sites will continue their activities like before,” the official IRNA news agency quoted Iranian Atomic Energy Organisation spokesman Behrouz Kamalvandi saying.

Lengthy process ahead

During a decade of on-and-off dialogue with world powers, Iran has rejected Western allegations that it has been seeking a nuclear weapons capability. It says it is enriching uranium only for electricity generation and medical purposes.

As part of a final deal, Iran expects the United States, the European Union and the United Nations to lift painful economic sanctions on the oil-dependent economy. But Western governments will be wary of giving up their leverage too soon.

Ahead of the talks, a senior US official said getting to a deal would be a “complicated, difficult and lengthy process”.

“When the stakes are this high, and the devil is truly in the details, one has to take the time required to ensure the confidence of the international community in the result,” the official said. “That can’t be done in a day, a week, or even a month in this situation.”

On the eve of the Vienna round, both sides played down anticipation of early progress, with Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei saying he was not optimistic.

The six powers hope to get a deal done by late July, when an interim accord struck in November expires.

That agreement, made possible by the election of relative moderate President Hassan Rouhani on a platform of relieving Iran’s international isolation by engaging constructively with its adversaries, obliged Tehran to suspend higher-level enrichment in return for some relief from economic sanctions.

Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif, also quoted by Press TV on Tuesday, sounded an optimistic note. “It is really possible to make an agreement because of a simple overriding fact and that is that we have no other option.”

Twin bomb blasts rock Beirut suburb, 3 dead — security

By - Feb 19,2014 - Last updated at Feb 19,2014

BEIRUT — Twin bomb blasts rocked a southern suburb of the Lebanese capital Beirut on Wednesday, killing at least three people and injuring dozens, security and medical sources told AFP.

The attacks appeared to target the Iranian cultural centre, and an AFP photographer at the scene said the blasts had occurred beyond a security checkpoint at the centre, close to the building.

A security source confirmed that the attack involved two blasts, but could not confirm if the attacks were car or suicide bombings.

Red Cross Secretary General George Kettaneh said three people had been killed and at least 70 wounded, some in serious condition.

The explosions sent a large plume of smoke over the area and Lebanese television showed scenes of widespread destruction.

Emergency teams carried wounded people away from a charred street strewn with rubble, as local residents armed with fire extinguishers helped firefighters put out blazes.

The arms of a wounded man hung limply off the sides of a yellow stretcher as he was carried from the scene.

The security official confirmed that the bombs had exploded near the Iranian cultural centre in the Bir Hassan district of the capital.

Bir Hassan is surrounded by neighbourhoods that are strongholds of the Lebanese Shiite movement Hizbollah and have been targeted in multiple bomb attacks killing civilians.

Lebanon has been rocked by a string of car and suicide bomb attacks in recent months, many targeting strongholds of the Hizbollah movement in apparent retribution for its role in Syria.

The group has admitted sending fighters to the neighbouring country to battle alongside Syria’s President Bashar Assad against an uprising.

Iran’s official news agency IRNA too reported that the blast took place near an Iranian cultural centre as well as close to the Beirut offices of IRNA and Iranian television IRIB.

Bir Hassan has been the scene of blasts before, including a powerful double bomb attack against the Iranian embassy there in November that killed 25 people.

Shiite Iran, which backs Hizbollah is a close ally of Syrian President Bashar Assad.

That attack was claimed by the Abdullah Azzam Brigades, an Al Qaeda inspired group.

Lebanon’s incoming prime minister Tammam Salam, who formed his government just last week, condemned the attack.

He said the bombings were a “message reflecting the determination of the forces of evil to harm Lebanon and its children and sow discord”.

“The message has been received and we will respond to it with solidarity and committment to civil accord and rallying around our army and our security forces,” he said in a statement.

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