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| Iranian outgoing Defence Minister Ali
Shamkhani during a news conference at the Defence Ministry in Tehran on
August 9 2005. | TEHRAN, Aug. 9 (Xinhuanet by
Zhang Shengping, Chen Wendi ) -- Iranian President Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad on Tuesday promised to put forward new initiatives on the escalating
nuclear standoff.
Ahmadinejad told UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan
through telephone that Iran was "ready to proceed with" nuclear talks with the
European Union (EU) and pledged that he would put forward new initiatives in
this respect after forming his cabinet. Meanwhile, the new president appealed to
Annan to help secure Iran's nuclear rights.
"Mr. Secretary-General is also expected to support
a member state of the international community to enjoy its rights. Of course,
his eminence will refrain from unilateral action," Ahmadinejad said.
Known as a hardliner on the nuclear issue,
Ahmadinejad did note laborate on his new initiatives but slammed an EU nuclear
proposal as an "insult" written in the style of colonialist discourse. The
latest nuclear standoff came after Iran officially rejected the EU proposal on
Monday and simultaneously resumed the work in uranium conversion facilities in
the central city Isfahan. Tehran insisted that the resumption of uranium
conversion facilities not be viewed as a move to close the door to negotiations,
stressing that its future activities will be supervised by the UN nuclear
watchdog.
The resumption immediately touched off stern
warnings from the EU, which termed it as a provocative act and called on the
international community to make united reaction.
Annan urged Ahmadinejad on Monday to show
restraint in thec urrent dispute with the EU and hoped that Tehran will continue
the negotiations to seek an acceptable solution to the prolonging nuclear
deadlock.
US State Department deputy spokesman Adam Ereli
reiterated that Iran's nuclear case should be submitted to the UN Security
Council if the negotiations with the EU collapse.
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| International Atomic Energy Agency Director
General Mohammad ElBaradei opens the board meeting at IAEA headquarters in
Vienna. |
International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Director
General Mohamed ElBaradei said that he hoped the current tension would not lead
to a permanent breach of the nuclear talks, and expressed "regret" on Iran's
resumption of conversion activities. On Tuesday evening, Russia, Iran's most
important partner in the nuclear field, urged Tehran to halt the conversion work
"without delay," slightly retreating from its previously stated stance that Iran
has an absolute right for uranium enrichment.
Under a call of the EU, the IAEA Board of
Governors opened an emergency meeting on Tuesday afternoon in Vienna, Austria,
to discuss the current standoff.
But it has been reported that the agency was just
likely to press Iran to stop the conversion work rather than to pass are
solution referring Iran's case to the Security Council. After Tuesday's IAEA
session, Cyrus Nasseri, Iran's senior negotiator, said Tehran is willing to
continue talks with the EU on condition that Europe abandon its demand for
Iran's halt to efforts to construct nuclear reactor. Enditem |