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- Envoys from Pakistan and Qatar arrived in Iran to intensify mediation and uphold the fragile cease fire.
- Negotiations stall over Iran uranium stockpile, a central sticking point in long term peace talks.
- Reports say Iran and Oman may charge transit fees for the Strait of Hormuz, prompting United States warnings.
- Under a fragile cease fire, negotiations show few concrete gains and an enduring peace agreement remains far from settled.
Stocks and oil prices rose slightly on Friday, with few signs of concrete progress in talks to establish a peace deal between the United States and Iran.
Pakistan and Qatar have dispatched envoys to Iran, officials and diplomats said on Friday, as mediators intensified efforts to prevent a monthlong cease-fire between Washington and Tehran from collapsing.
Nearly three months since the fighting began, disagreements remain over the fate of Iran’s uranium stockpile and reports that Iran and Oman may impose transit fees on vessels passing through the Strait of Hormuz. The Trump administration has warned against charging ships for passing through the strait, a critical shipping lane for oil and gas.
Under a fragile cease-fire, negotiations over the points of an enduring peace agreement appear far from settled.
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