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Tuesday 23 April 2013Iran's Wooing of Africa Yields Scant Results as Sanctions BiteVOA NEWS Before Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad started a visit to Niger last week, there was talk that the poor West African state might add Iran to its list of buyers for the uranium mined in its remote desert north. South African Deputy Foreign Minister Ebrahim Ebrahim said he had told Tehran frankly that his country could no longer purchase Iranian oil to avoid running into Western sanctions. "While we may appreciate and sympathise with them, there are certain realities that we need to take into consideration.'' IMF data also suggests that Iran's trade with Africa - a Senegal exemplifies Iran's checkered record. A deal signed under the previous government of President Abdoulaye Wade led to a factory churning out yellow, Iranian-designed vehicles. But promises of a Iranian-built refinery to help ease Then the seizure of a secret Iranian arms shipment in The link between Iran and Lebanese militant group Hezbollah, which was ties in West Africa, causes particular concern. Iranian warships visited Sudan last year after Khartoum In Niamey, the Nigerien capital, Ahmadinejad called on "The enemy doesn't want to see nations, especially Muslim ones, have good ties. They are always plotting ... but there is no doubt that the will of the people will triumph,'' he said. |