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HomeWorld NewsGlobal NewsWhat will closer ties with Iran look like? – DW – 10/30/2023

What will closer ties with Iran look like? – DW – 10/30/2023

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Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi is visiting South Africa on Tuesday as Tehran seeks to deepen its partnerships across the African continent amid heavy US economic sanctions.

Since assuming office in 2021, Raisi has pursued a deliberate strategy of strengthening Iran’s non-Western foreign policy approach.

Raisi visited Kenya, Uganda, and Zimbabwe — which is also under US sanctions — in July, marking the first visit by an Iranian leader to the Africa continent in over a decade.

In Kenya, he referred to Africa as a “continent of opportunities” — emphasizing its potential as a market for Iranian products. 

“None of us are satisfied with the current volume of trade and the current economic exchange between countries,” Raisi said.

Iran’s African Interests

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Raisi’s official visit to Pretoria comes just one week after South African Foreign Minister Naledi Pandor was in Tehran.

The Iranian president was in South Africa in August this year for the South Africa–Iran Joint Commission of Cooperation (JCC) held ahead of the BRICS summit in August. 

The BRICS countries — Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa — are set to welcome Iran and five other counties to the group in January 2024, a feat many analysts say South Africa was instrumental in realizing.

South Africa and Iran’s historical and fraternal relationship

Ties between the two countries date back to the apartheid era when Iran supported South Africa’s liberation movements.

Iran was one of the first countries to lift sanctions against South Africa after the country attained Black majority rule in 1994.

The JCC was established in 1995, under which the two nations have signed several bilateral agreements in almost all key areas.

During the JCC meeting held in August in Pretoria, Iran’s Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian said Iran wanted to bolster its relations with South Africa for their mutual benefit.

“The Islamic Republic of Iran is fully ready to enhance bilateral relations with South Africa without any restrictions in all areas of mutual interest such as scientific cooperation, new technology enhancement, new technologies exchange as well as culture, tourism, economic, trade and new energy sector,” Amir-Abdollahian said.

Iranian exports to Africa in 2022 reached $1.28 billion (€1.20 billion) up from $579 million in 2020, according to the Middle East Insitute.

What’s in it for South Africa?

And this year alone, Iran’s trade with African countries is expected to increase to more than $2 billion, Iran’s foreign ministry said.

The growth in some targeted areas has been even greater, with Iran’s exports of technical and engineering services to Africa increasing by 700% in 2022.

Iran is also eyeing increased trade with the rest of the African continent, according to Sayed Hoseini, director of the Islamic Centre for Africa.

And, he told DW that South Africa wants to take advantage of Iran’s geographical position for its trade with the other BRICS countries.

“Iran is situated in a very strategic point in the Middle East and South Asia. In that area Iran can facilitate India, Russia to be connected through the north-south corridor,” Hoseini explained.

“And then it can connect China to the Persian Gulf and from the Persian Gulf it can connect to South Africa and connect the rest of the world.”

Iran is still on the list of US sanctions and its closeness with South Africa has raised eyebrows, according to several analysts. 

Naledi Pandor, however, said Iran shares common positions on global issues with South Africa.

“Our intention both as South Africa and the Islamic Republic of Iran has been to encourage a world that is at peace with itself,” Pandor said during a recent meeting with her Iranian counterparts.

Edited by: Keith Walker

While you’re here: Every weekday, we host AfricaLink, a podcast packed with news, politics, culture and more. You can listen and follow AfricaLink wherever you get your podcasts

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