US firms can use Gold Cards to recruit Indians: Trump
The "Gold Card" unveiled by President Trump on Wednesday offers US Citizenship to wealthy foreign nationals provided they are willing to invest USD 5 million.
Representational Image (Photo: Getty Images)
Iran’s Petroleum Minister Bijan Namdar Zangeneh has said that the US exit from the 2015 Iran nuclear deal will not affect the oil industry, state TV reported on Friday.
Iran had been able to safeguard its oil industry against such threats over the past few years, Zangeneh was quoted as saying by Xinhua news agency.
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“I believe America’s withdrawal from the deal would lead to no significant impacts with regards to Iran’s exports of oil,” Zangeneh added.
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Iran’s revenues from the oil and gas would be maintained as envisaged in the national budget bill, he said.
On Tuesday, US President Donald Trump dumped the international Iranian nuclear deal, saying that Washington will not extend the waiver for the unilateral sanctions against Tehran.
Trump said that he will re-impose even stronger sanctions against Tehran to make the Islamic republic sit at the negotiation table for changes of “flaws” in the deal.
The sanctions would include a ban over Iran’s oil exports as well as restrictions on investments in the country’s energy sector.
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The "Gold Card" unveiled by President Trump on Wednesday offers US Citizenship to wealthy foreign nationals provided they are willing to invest USD 5 million.
US President Donald Trump will host Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy on Friday to sign what he called "a very big agreement" to share revenue from Ukraine's rare earth mineral deposits, even though the two leaders remain far apart on whether the US will provide security guarantees for Ukraine once its war with Russia is over, Politico reported.
US President Donald Trump announced on Tuesday (local time) that the United States will introduce a "gold card" for wealthy foreigners, granting them the right to live and work in the country, with a pathway to citizenship, in exchange for a USD five million fee
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