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TEHRAN, Nov. 8 (Xinhuanet) -- Iran on Tuesday rejected a
recent statement issued by the European Union (EU) which urges Tehran to fully
suspend activities related to uranium enrichment before the two sides resume the
stalled bilateral nuclear talks.
Iranian chief nuclear negotiator Ali
Larijani Tuesday rejected the EU call to stop the uranium conversion facilities
and condemned the EU for having gone extremes and adopting journalistic hype
toward the Iranian nuclear issue, the official IRNA news agency reported.
EU foreign ministers issued a statement on Monday at
a meeting in Brussels, Belgium, to reiterate Europe's precondition for reopening
the talks that Iran must fully suspend all enrichment-related activities.
The statement came one day after Larijani called on
the EU to resume the nuclear talks in a letter to foreign ministers of France,
Britain and Germany, the European trio negotiating with Iran on behalf of the
union.
Larijani expressed hope that Director General of the
International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Mohamed ElBaradei to deliver a
"satisfactory report" on Iran's nuclear program and "verify that the program is
of civilian nature".
Earlier in the day, Foreign Ministry Spokesman
Hamid-Reza Asefi also voiced regret over the EU's insistence on the demand of
full suspension, calling on Europe to "honor its previous commitments and
officially recognize Iran's rights in this regard and not be bigoted if the
ground is to be paved for understanding and progress".
Meanwhile, former president Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani,
who currently chairs the powerful Expediency Council, said that Iran would
continue confidence-building measures on its nuclear dispute.
Criticizing the EU for failing to react positively to
Iran's suspension of enrichment-related activities, Rafsanjani stressed that
confidence-building measures "is a two-sided process".
The nuclear negotiations between Iran and the EU, starting
after Tehran suspended all activities related to uranium enrichment in Nov.
2004, have been scuttled since Iran in early August resumed the uranium
conversion activities, the preparatory step for enrichment.
In response to Iran's defiant move, the IAEA in late
September adopted a EU-drafted resolution, urging Iran to re-suspend
allenrichment-related activities with the warning of referring its nuclear case
to the UN Security Council.
Iran has rejected the resolution as politically
motivated,saying that it will never return to the full suspension.The United
States accuses Iran of developing nuclear weaponssecretly, a charge rejected by
Tehran. Enditem
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