Iran, Venezuela sign 20-year partnership agreement

Iranian President Ebrahim Raeisi and his visiting Venezuelan counterpart Nicolas Maduro have signed a 20-year partnership agreement aimed at boosting cooperation in various fields between the two friendly countries.
The signing ceremony was
officially held in the presence of the two presidents in the Iranian capital of
Tehran on Saturday.
The partnership agreement
includes cooperation in the fields of science, technology, agriculture, oil and
gas, petrochemicals, tourism as well as culture.
Raeisi hailed the pact as an
indication of the two countries' determination to expand bilateral ties
despite pressure from the United States and other Western countries.
“The Islamic Republic of Iran has
always sought relations with independent countries in its foreign policy, and
Venezuela has resisted the sanctions of the enemies and imperialism and has
shown exemplary resistance,” Raeisi told the ceremony.
"There have been numerous
sanctions and threats against our country over the past 24 years, but the
Iranian nation decided to turn the sanctions into an opportunity for the sake
of the country's progress.”
Raeisi said
Washington's maximum pressure on Iran has miserably failed as
acknowledged by the US, adding the admission is a victory for Iran and a
defeat for the enemies.
Praising the Venezuelan nation’s
resistance against the US, the Iranian president said, “Venezuela went through
difficult years, but the will of the people and the government of this country
was that it must stand up to the enemies, and it has moved in that direction.”
“Our relationship with Venezuela
is strategic and exists in many different areas,” Raeisi noted. “The signing of
the 20-year cooperation document between the two countries is a manifestation
of the will of the high officials of the two countries to expand ties in
various fields.”
The Iranian president also said
that “cooperation in the fields of energy, thermal power plants, repair
and overhaul of refineries, exportation of technical and engineering services,
economic, defense and military relations in the current government are
indicative of the existence of many potentials and capacities in the two
countries.”
He hoped that the Venezuelan
president’s visit to Iran will be a turning point in boosting relations between
the two countries.
Raeisi said the launch of direct
Tehran-Caracas flights, which will take place soon, is an opportunity for
the two countries to expand economic and trade relations and bring their
relations closer.
Maduro: Count on our support
The Venezuelan president, for his
part, lauded the 20-year partnership agreement between Tehran and Caracas,
saying the two sides will be able to expand bilateral relationship by
consolidating their ties and drawing a clear vision in the next two decades.
“We will use the historical
experiences of Iran and put technology at the focal point of this cooperation
agreement,” Maduro said.
“We are witnessing different
areas of cooperation between the two countries in the fields of energy,
oil, gas, refineries and petrochemicals, and in the field of financing through
the Iran-Venezuela Relations Development Bank, as well as in the field of defense.”
The Venezuelan president also
confirmed the launch of direct flights from Caracas to Tehran and vice versa as
of July 18, stressing that it will help develop tourism.
“The youths of Iran and Venezuela must know that the world of the future is a world of equality and justice. We stand against imperialism, and together we must build the future,” Maduro said. “I tell the Iranian people to count on all our support and cooperation.”