Six world powers and Iran have suspended their expert-level talks on implementing a landmark nuclear deal until after Christmas, a spokeswoman for EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton said yesterday.

Experts from the US, Russia, China, France, Britain, Germany and Iran met in Geneva between Thursday and yesterday to settle the practical details of the accord, which obliges Tehran to suspend its most sensitive nuclear work.

They need to decide when the November 24 deal goes into effect, meaning when Iran has to fulfil its obligations and Western governments ease some economic sanctions in return.

A key sticking point appears to be how much advance information Western governments will get so they can verify Iran is meeting its end of the deal before lifting sanctions.

The spokeswoman for Ashton, who oversees diplomacy with Iran on behalf of the six nations, did not say how much progress, if any, had been made towards resolving the numerous technical aspects of the deal in the four days of talks.

“There will be a break in technical talks over Christmas,” Maja Kocijancic said.

“We expect that technical talks will resume before the New Year.”

Ashton spoke with Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif yesterday to discuss the talks, she said. Diplomats have said although the task is complicated, there is real political will on both sides to carry out the agreement.

They need to decide when the November 24 deal goes into effect

Zarif was quoted by Iran’s semi-official Fars news agency, however, as saying that the talks in Geneva were “moving forward slowly”.

The Geneva round was the second time nuclear experts and sanctions specialists from the seven countries and the EU had met to figure out how the nuclear deal will be implemented.

Earlier this month, a round of talks in Vienna was suspended after the United States blacklisted 19 Iranian companies and people, and some Iranian officials said this decision violated the spirit of the November 24 nuclear agreement.

Iran rejects Western fears that its nuclear work has any military intentions and says it needs nuclear power for electricity generation and medical research.

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