UN Nuclear Watchdog Gets Response From Iran
New York, Oct 29 2009 5:10PM
Iran has submitted an initial response on a draft agreement on fuel for its civilian nuclear research facility to the head of the United Nations International Atomic Energy Agency (http://www.iaea.org/NewsCenter/PressReleases/2009/prn200914.html), it was announced today.
Last week, the country asked
for more time to consider the proposal on the provision of
fuel for the site in Iran’s capital, Tehran, which, among
other activities, produces medical radioisotopes for
therapeutic and diagnostic procedures.
The agreement
was announced at the end of a three-day meeting – also
attended by representatives from France, Russia and the
United States – at IAEA headquarters in Vienna on 21
October.
IAEA Director General Mohamed ElBaradei had
given the nations involved until last Friday to approve the
proposal, but Iran asked for more time to consider the draft
while the three other parties signalled their
endorsement.
Mr. ElBaradei is consulting with the
Iranian Government and others “with the hope that
agreement on his proposal can be reached soon,” according
to an IAEA press release.
Last week, he characterized
the draft text as a “balanced approach on how to move
forward,” adding that its endorsement by all four
countries would be a “very important confidence-building
measure that can defuse the crisis that has been going on
for a number of years and open space for
negotiations.”
The IAEA chief also voiced hope that
if approved, the agreement will “open the way for a
complete normalization of relations between Iran and the
international community.”
Over the weekend, IAEA
inspectors visited a recently-disclosed uranium enrichment
facility in the Iranian city of Qom, southwest of Tehran,
whose existence and construction the agency was informed of
late last month.
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has
said the facility
violates Security Council resolutions because of the
delay in its disclosure and has repeated his call for Iran
to implement Council resolutions and cooperate with the IAEA
on resolving outstanding concerns regarding its nuclear
programme.
Iran has stated that its nuclear programme
is for peaceful purposes, but some other countries contend
it is driven by military ambitions. The issue has been of
international concern since the discovery in 2003 that the
country had concealed its nuclear activities for 18 years in
breach of its obligations under the Nuclear
Non-Proliferation Treaty
(NPT).
ENDS