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TEHRAN, May 8 (Xinhuanet) -- Iran said Sunday that it
was preparing a draft bill to ratify the Additional Protocol of the
Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) as it was trying to press the European Union (EU)
to accept its new proposals on the country's nuclear program.
"The Foreign Ministry has
started preparing a draft bill on the ratification of the Additional Protocol,
which will be presented to the state commission for scrutiny and then, if
approved, to the Majlis (Parliament)," Foreign Ministry spokesman Hamid-Reza
Asefitold reporters.
The Iranian government signed the Additional Protocol
in December 2003 under increasing international pressure, but the Majlis has not
approved the protocol so far.
Hardliners in the country, dissatisfied with the
government's policy on the nuclear issue, repeatedly threatened to veto the
Additional Protocol and withdraw from the NPT when the situation of Iran's
nuclear issue went critical.
Tehran has recently announced that it decided to
resume some uranium enrichment activities as the nuclear talks with the EU had
been stranded.
Asefi also reaffirmed that Iran will resume some work
on its nuclear fuel process but did not reveal when to start."The decision has
been made and we are to restart some activities at the uranium conversion
facility in Isfahan," Asefi said.
Iran, currently in talks with the European Union on
its nuclear issue, suspended uranium enrichment last November, but claimed the
suspension is a voluntary and revocable move.
"We remain committed to negotiations while starting
some activities and voluntary suspension will extend," Asefi stressed. The
spokesman also touched on the latest proposals Iran presented to achieve what
the EU called "objective guarantees" that Iran's nuclear activities will never
be diverted to military purposes.
"Consolidated relations between the related sides,
enrichment limits, legal channels including the NPT and the Additional Protocol
and the International Atomic Energy Agency's (IAEA) supervision are the
proposals Iran has given to the Europeans as objective guarantees," he said.
Iranian Foreign Minister Kamal Kharazi said on
Saturday in New York that Iran had presented four new proposals in order to
break the current deadlock in the nuclear negotiations. The four suggestions are
Iran's ratification of the Additional Protocol, the admission of permanent and
comprehensive inspections of the IAEA, the resumption of restricted enrichment
activities and fueling reactors under supervision, as well as trade agreements
between Iran and the EU.
Asefi, on his part, called upon the Europeans to
examine the proposals carefully and within the framework of the Paris Agreement
reached between the two sides last November.
According to the Paris Agreement, Iran suspended all
its uranium enrichment activities, which then opened the door to EU-Iran
negotiations.
However, the two sides failed to reach further
agreement on key issues such as "objective guarantees" as late as April 29 when
they held the latest round of talks in London.
Iran has blamed the EU for the prolonged talks,
insisting that compromise should not be one-sided.
Kicking the ball to the European court, Asefi said
time was now ripe for the Europeans to make their decision.
"The negotiations with the Europeans have entered a
new stage. Iran has presented its proposals and now it is the Europeans' turn to
make their decision after close scrutiny," the spokesman underlined.
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