Belarus wants to boost trade with Iran
"Trade between Belarus and Iran is much lower than it could be," Alexander Lukashenko told an Iranian minister.
"It is absolutely inadmissible to leave it at the current level."
The presidential press service said trade between the two countries in the first two months of 2006 had slipped by 8% year-on-year to about $5 billion, primarily due to a fall in Belarus' exports.
Iran's Commerce Minister Masud Mir-Kazemi said President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was also seeking to develop bilateral ties, as stated in his letter to the Belarusian leader.
"We have common approaches not only in the political sphere, but also in the economic and in scientific-technical areas," he said, citing the letter.
Lukashenko said that Minsk would definitely fulfill all its earlier commitments to Tehran, and asked Mir-Kazemi to deliver this message to Ahmadinejad.
Belarus, Iran to bring economic ties onto new level
Belarus and Iran are set to bring the trade-economic cooperation onto higher level. As it was stated at the 7th sitting of the mixed Belarusian-Iranian commission for economic cooperation, the two parties see as feasible the trade volume of $100-$200 million.
Currently the trade stands at about $40 million despite goof growth dynamics, Belarusian Telegraph Agency (BELTA) reported.
According to industry minister, chairman of the Belarusian delegation in the mixed commission Anatoliy Rusetskiy, banking, petrochemical and investment branches are the most promising.
The Belarusian delegation includes leaders of the government bodies, committees, several enterprises and free economic zones. Iranian delegation which comprises businessmen and entrepreneurs is headed by minister of commerce Mirkazemi.