Dubai's ruler Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid al-Maktoum has urged that sanctions on Iran be lifted, complaining that his emirate has suffered from the punitive measures imposed on its Gulf neighbour.
"Give Iran a space," Sheikh Mohammed said in an interview with the BBC, excerpts of which were provided by the channel today.
He said he was in favour of the lifting of sanctions slapped on Tehran over its controversial nuclear programme, in the wake of a landmark deal on the issue reached with world powers.
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"We have suffered from the sanctions," he said in an excerpt of the interview aired by the BBC today.
The sheikh said he believes that Tehran is "telling the truth" when it says that its nuclear ambitions are peaceful.
Being a hub for transit trade, Dubai's commerce with Iran was hit by the tightened sanctions. The city has an Iranian community of around 400,000 people.
Tehran signed in November a landmark deal with world powers under which it agreed to roll back parts of its nuclear work and halt further advances in exchange for the release of billions of dollars in frozen assets and limited relief from sanctions that have choked its economy.
The agreement is due to take effect from January 20.