France and Iran hailed the sale of Airbus planes and the renewal of a
decades-old carmaking venture as symbols of thawing relations on
Thursday while protesters in Paris tried to get human rights onto the
agenda.
President Hassan Rouhani was accompanied on his official visit to
Paris, the first by an Iranian president since 1999, by ministers and
business leaders who announced deals including a joint venture between
carmakers PSA Peugeot Citroen and Iran Khodro and plans for Iran to buy
118 Airbus passenger planes to update its aging fleet.
His visit after a stop-off in Rome for more deals follows an
agreement between Iran and the west on Iran's nuclear programme,
allowing the lifting of sanctions this month.
The deals were signed at a ceremony attended by Rouhani and French President Francois Hollande.
Construction group Bouygues and airport operator are set to build an
extension for Tehran airport,
while Vinci, another building firm, is
lined up to design, build and operate new terminals for the Mashhad and
Ispahan airports.
French oil company Total said it would buy some 200,000 barrels of Iranian crude from the OPEC producer.
There were also deals in shipping, health, agriculture and water provision, all signed despite continued diplomatic tensions.
Deals unfinished, banks wary
The Airbus deal alone is worth $27 billion at list prices and French
government sources put a 15 billion euro ($16 billion) overall tag on
the agreements.
But most have yet to be finalised or are subject to conditions. Senior French bankers have expressed wariness.
Iran's industry minister Mohammad Reza Nematzadeh said an agreement
between French export-credit group Coface and the Iranian central bank
signed this week was an important step in the right direction.
But he said French banks must support a corporate push into
post-sanctions Iran. "If they don't get active, there will be no
increase in business," he warned.
For Peugeot, the Iranian factory tie up is critical. When it
suspended sales in Iran in 2012 it lost nearly 10 per cent of global
deliveries and interrupted a relationship dating back more than 50
years.
Under Thursday's deal, set to be finalised in the middle of this
year, Peugeot and Iran Khodro plan to modernise a factory near Tehran
and be producing cars by mid 2017.
They target an initial 200,000 vehicles a year making Peugeot 208,
2008 and 301 models with a Peugeot investment of 400 million euros ($436
million) over five years.
Away from the signing ceremonies and speeches, an estimated 3,000
people marched through Paris seeking to raise awareness about human
rights. A protestor from the Femen womens' activist group dangled in a
mock hanging from a bridge with an Iranian flag painted across her naked
chest.
Human Rights Watch criticised Iran on the death penalty and abuse of
rights of women and minorities. It also said the state of emergency
declared by Hollande after Islamist militant attacks in Paris on
November 13 last year threatens rights to liberty and freedom of
movement.
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