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TEHRAN, Aug. 10 (Xinhuanet) -- Iran on Wednesday afternoon completely unsealed its uranium conversion plant in the central city of Isfahan and restarted the facilities later, moving closer to producing uranium enrichment material.
The unsealing was announced by head
of Iran's Atomic Energy Organization Gholamreza Aghazadeh, who declared that the
last seals on the uranium conversion facilities had been removed. Aghazadeh's
deputy Mohammad Saidi stressed that the International Atomic Energy Agency
(IAEA) had previously authorized the removing of seals.
"The (uranium conversion) plant
would be in full operation within hours following the unsealing," Saidi added.
The removal paved the way for Iran to fully resume its uranium conversion
activities, which it started on Monday after IAEA inspectors partially finished
installing supervisory equipments in the facilities.
However, the uranium conversion
facilities will become productive 15 days later.
"Once the seal is broken, a 15-day
interval is required between the final stages of operation at the Isfahan
facilities and the production of its final product," an informed official told
the official IRNA news agency several hours after the unsealing. The activities
in Isfahan facilities are the preparatory step toward uranium enrichment,
namely, the process of turning uraniumore nicknamed "yellowcake" to uranium
hexafluoride gas, which can be fed into connected centrifuges to yield enriched
uranium, the material that can be used to generate electricity or build nuclear
weapons.
The latest nuclear dispute came
after Tehran rejected a comprehensive nuclear proposal presented by the European
trio of Britain, France and Germany, the longtime brokers of the Iranian nuclear
issue for nearly two years.
In the proposal, the European trio
demanded that Tehran permanently halt uranium enrichment activities it suspended
last November in exchange for nuclear fuel supplied by other countries. Iran
resumed some work in Isfahan facilities on Monday, a move which touched off
stern warnings from the EU.
Iranian President Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad has said that theresumption of uranium conversion should not be
viewed as a move toclose the door to negotiations with the EU, voicing
Iran'sreadiness to continue the talks.
At the request of the European trio,
the IAEA Board of Governorsopened an emergency meeting late Tuesday in Vienna,
Austria.However, the emergency meeting was stalled due to disputes overan EU
resolution urging Iran to halt resumed activities. A secondsession of the
meeting due on Wednesday was also cancelled.The EU has said that it will seek to
refer Iran's nuclear caseto the UN Security Council if Tehran does not withdraw
from whatthe Europeans called a provocative move.
Iranian officials have said
repeatedly that Iran was not afraidof the referral, for the EU will lose more in
that case."Energy security in the world is not possible without Iran,"Expediency
Council Chairman Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani has warned."Iran plays a very
effective role in world energy security.Today the world is dependent on us," he
said, adding Tehran hadgraciously avoided taking any adventurous approach and
had remainedcommitted to international and regional security.
"Iran is in a powerful position in
view of its resources,geographical location and scientific capability; it gained
accessto this technology at a time when it was under sanctions," he
said.Enditem |