TEHRAN Uomo Nike Air Max 270 Nere Verde Scontate , March 17 (Xinhua) -- In the Iranian tradition, the eve of Wednesday before Nowruz is celebrated with people jumping over bonfires and playing with firecrackers. Yet Armiri's business is not doing well.
Many people don't have spare money for even small luxuries like firecrackers, blaming sanctions for the sluggish market. Armiri hoped good talks can give people more reason to celebrate.
The talks are scheduled to end on Friday, one day before Nowruz, meaning many Iranians will spend their New Year's Eve watching Iran's nuclear negotiators Uomo Nike Air Max 270 Verde Scontate , especially Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif on TV.
Expectations for solving the nuclear issue and more importantly lifting the sanctions on Iran have been growing among Iranians since President Hassan Rouhani took office in 2013 and gave talks top priority.
The Rouhani government has launched many rounds of nuclear talks with the P5+1 group, namely Britain, China, France, Russia Uomo Nike Air Max 270 Flyknit Nere Scontate , the United States and Germany, breaking ice with an interim deal sealed in Geneva at the end of 2013. Both sides took a step back as Iran froze its nuclear project while Western powers eased sanctions.
In addition, Iran has held several rounds of bilateral talks with the United States while not long ago direct engagement with the Americans was still taboo in the Islamic republic.
A Gallup poll in November 2014 also evidenced rising hopes among Iranians as it showed 70 percent of Iranians are at least somewhat hopeful that an agreement will be eventually reached, up from 58 percent in 2013.
Saturday will be Nowruz, also the start of spring and the most important national holiday. Yet little trace of joyous celebration can be found on the streets as people anxiously wait for the results of the ongoing nuclear talks in Lausanne Nike Air Max 270 Trainers Nere Scontate , Switzerland.
"These days, people are just waiting," said Mohammad Mofaser who had been sitting idly in a money exchange office with his colleague in northern Tehran for the better of the day.
Usually, the Iranian currency rial would have plummeted against the U.S. dollar and euro by this time of the year as Iranians rush to buy foreign currency to prepare for travels abroad during the long holidays of Nowruz.
But this year, people are in no hurry just in case some good news from the talks may bolster