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BEIJING, Aug. 1 -- Iran warned yesterday it
would resume sensitive nuclear work within days if the European Union failed to
submit proposals aimed at ending a long-running crisis over its nuclear
programme.
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| Outgoing Iranian President Mohammad Khatami
gestures as he gets into his car after a cabinet meeting in Tehran July
27, 2005. (Reuters) | Foreign ministry spokesman
Hamid Reza Asefi said Iran would inform the UN nuclear watchdog, the
International Atomic Energy Agency, later yesterday or today of the resumption
of some uranium conversion work, a key stage in the nuclear fuel cycle.
"The time limit (on the suspension of such
activities) has passed and public opinion cannot wait any longer," Asefi said.
The conversion process, carried out in Iran at a
facility in the central city of Isfahan, changes uranium ore into the uranium
gas that is the feedstock for enrichment.
Although Iran has currently frozen its enrichment
work, chief nuclear negotiator Hassan Rowhani said Iran was capable of producing
enriched uranium in a very short time if it came under attack.
"As soon as we decide to begin enrichment, we will be
capable of reaching the desired goal in a very short time and in case our
nuclear installations were attacked militarily, we could pursue enrichment
unencumbered," Rowhani said in a report to outgoing President Mohammad Khatami
published by the official news agency IRNA.
The so-called EU-3 of Britain, France and Germany is
preparing a package of trade, technology and security incentives in return for
Iran guaranteeing its nuclear programme is peaceful.
"If the Europeans submit their proposals by 5 pm
(1230 GMT) we will examine them, if not we will resume some of our activities in
Isfahan tomorrow," nuclear negotiator Ali Agha Mohammadi said.
But he added: "Our position is that we want to pursue
the negotiations with the Europeans."
Asefi said there was a deadline of today for the EU
offer, something denied by the Europeans who have previously said they intended
to submit the proposals after new president Mahmood Ahmadinejad takes office on
Wednesday.
New president to visit UN
Iran confirmed yesterday that President-elect Mahmood
Ahmadinejad will attend the UN General Assembly in New York in September,
dismissing any possible US visa restrictions in the wake of allegations of his
role in the US embassy siege.
"Yes, Mr Ahmadinejad and the accompanying delegation
will go to New York to take part in the UN world summit, he will also meet with
the Iranians there," foreign ministry spokesman Hamid Reza Asefi told reporters.
(Source: China Daily) |