
	January 28, 2012
	
	from
	
	PressTV Website 
	
	 
	
	 
	
	 
	
		
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	Iranian lawmakers aim to ban 
	all oil exports to European countries in response to the oil ban against 
	Iran.  | 
			Lawmaker  
			Nasser Soudani 
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	An Iranian lawmaker says the Majlis (parliament) 
	Energy Committee has finalized a draft bill to stop the country's oil 
	exports to EU member states in reaction to the bloc's recent decision to ban 
	oil imports from Iran.
	
	Nasser Soudani, deputy chairman of the committee, said on Saturday 
	that the double-urgency bill for halting Iran oil exports to Europe had been 
	finalized in four clauses.
	
		
		“According to one of the main clauses, the 
		Islamic Republic of Iran will halt all oil exports to European countries 
		as long as they continue to ban oil imports from Iran,” he added.
	
	
	The lawmaker said the bill may undergo further 
	modifications as some Iranian parliamentarians believe that oil exports 
	to EU should be stopped for five years.
	
		
		“Another clause obliges the government to 
		forbid imports of all goods from countries which have imposed sanctions 
		on our country,” he added.
	
	
	Soudani announced on January 25 that in reaction 
	to EU sanctions against Iran's oil sector and central bank, Iranian 
	lawmakers were drafting a new law to stop oil supply to European countries.
	
	During their latest meeting in Brussels on January 23, EU foreign ministers 
	reached an agreement to ban oil imports from Iran, freeze the country's 
	central bank's assets within EU, and ban sales of diamonds, gold and other 
	precious metals to Iran.
	
	EU foreign policy chief, Catherine Ashton, claimed that the new 
	sanctions aim to bring Iran back to negotiations with P5+1,
	
		
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			US 
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			UK 
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			France 
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			Russia 
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			China  
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			Germany, 
	
	... over the country's peaceful nuclear program.
	
	The United States, Israel and their European allies accuse Tehran of 
	pursuing military objectives in its nuclear program and have used this 
	pretext to impose four rounds of international and a series of unilateral 
	sanctions against the Islamic Republic.
	
	Iran has refuted the allegations, arguing that as a signatory to the Nuclear 
	Non-Proliferation Treaty and a member of the International Atomic Energy 
	Agency, Tehran has a right to use nuclear technology for peaceful use.