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News ID: 96503
Publish Date : 12 November 2021 - 22:10

Iran Signs Deal to Resume Sending Pilgrims to Syria

DAMASCUS (Dispatches) --
Tehran and Damascus have signed an agreement to resume dispatching pilgrims to Syria, as the regional counties continue to normalize relations with the Arab country.
The agreement was inked by head of Iran’s Hajj and Pilgrimage Organization Alireza Rashidian and Syria’s Tourism Minister Muhammad Rami Radwan Martini during the former’s visit to Syria.
“The issue of health, observance of health protocols, and safety of pilgrims is very important in re-establishing these trips,” Rashidian said after the meeting on Thursday.
He added, “The reopening of this pilgrimage route will bring joy to Iranian pilgrims.”
In recent days, Iran has also welcomed the reestablishment of relations between Syria and other Arab countries of the region, saying such moves will benefit both sides.
“Syria has always been one of the most important and most influential countries in the Arab world and the region, and Syria’s renewed presence in the region will lead to further growth and dynamism in this region,” Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Saeed Khatibzadeh said on Thursday.
There has been a race among Arab countries in recent month to mend their ties with the Syrian government, ten years after the beginning of a conflict in Syria, through which key Arab countries tried to overthrow President Bashar al-Assad.
On Thursday, Syria signed a contract with a group of Emirati companies to build a solar power station in a Damascus suburb.
According to Syrian state media, the solar power station will be constructed in the eastern Damascus suburb of Widyan al-Rabie.
The project would take two years to finish and it will produce 300 megawatts at peak rates.
Last month, Syria’s electricity ministry struck a $115 million deal with an Iranian company to rehabilitate a power station in the central Syrian province of Hama.
On Tuesday, the United Arab Emirates’ Foreign Minister Abdullah bin Zayed Al Nahyan traveled to Damascus for the first time after a decade, where he met top Syrian officials, including President Assad.
The new approach adopted by the UAE, which has proven to be much quicker than other Arab countries in making considerable foreign policy shifts to secure its interests, was welcomed by the Syrian president as “realistic and correct”.
At the same time, the move was castigated by the U.S., which said it “will not express any support for efforts to normalize” relations with Assad.
The change of approach toward the Damascus government began in the aftermath of the United States’ hasty and disastrous withdrawal from Afghanistan, where Washington left its allies, including Ashraf Ghani’s government, alone against the Taliban militant group.