IranIraq

Envoy: Iraqi PM Due in Tehran on Wednesday

13920411000514_PhotoI Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri Al-Maliki is slated to pay an official visit to Tehran in the next few days to discuss bilateral ties, a senior Iranian diplomat announced on Sunday.
Speaking to FNA in Baghdad, Iranian Ambassador to Iraq Hassan Danaee Far said Al-Maliki will arrive in Tehran on Wednesday for a two-day visit which will take place at the invitation of Iranian First Vice-President Eshaq Jahangiri.

The upcoming visit will be Al-Maliki’s first visit to Iran after the coming to power of President Hassan Rouhani.

Last month, President Rouhani announced that Al-Maliki would travel to Tehran to discuss implementation of a border agreement signed between the two countries in Algerian capital, Algiers, in 1975.

“The President (Rouhani) in a meeting with the members of the Assembly of Khuzestan province’s lawmakers reiterated the implementation of the 1975 Algiers Agreement and announced that the Iraqi prime minister will travel to Tehran to discuss cleaning and dredging of Arvand River,” Khuzestan MP Abdollah Tammimi said.

The 1975 Algiers Agreement (also known as the Algiers Accord, sometimes as the Algiers Declaration) was an agreement between Iran and Iraq to settle their border disputes (such as the Shatt al-Arab, known as Arvand River in Iran), and served as basis for the bilateral treaties signed on June 13 and December 26, 1975.

Less than six years after signing the treaty, Iraq attacked Iran to invade her border lands. The primary motivating factor behind the Iraqi invasion under deposed Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein was to annex and incorporate Iran’s oil-rich Khuzestan province to Iraqi territory. However, that invasion was quickly countered with fierce resistance by Iranian Armed Forces. The Iran–Iraq War lasted eight years, and finally ended with a United Nations brokered ceasefire in the form of United Nations Security Council Resolution 598, which was accepted by both sides.

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