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TEHRAN, Nov. 12 (Xinhuanet) -- Iran vowed Saturday that it
would not move uranium enrichment to other countries while Russia denied a
recent report that it made a proposal to that effect to ease the tension over
the Iranian nuclear issue.
Gholamreza Aghazadeh, the country's vice-president
and head of the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran (AEOI), made the statement to
reporters after his meeting with visiting Russian Security Council Secretary
Igor Ivanov.
"Iran's nuclear fuel must be produced in the Iranian
territory," said Gholamreza, adding that foreign participation in Iran's
enrichment program will be welcome, but the actual process must take place in
Iran.
Ivanov, who arrived here Friday for a three-day visit
to Iran,reiterated Russia's stance that Iran's nuclear issue be settled through
discussions within the framework of the International Atomic Energy Agency
(IAEA).
He, meanwhile, denied a recently reported Russian
proposal that Iran be allowed to keep uranium conversion while shifting the most
sensitive part of nuclear fuel cycle - enrichment - to Russia to remove Western
fears that the enrichment process could enable Iranto produce nuclear
weapons-grade uranium.
The United States has accused Iran of developing
nuclear weapons, a charge has repeatedly rejected by Tehran. Recently, media
reports said that the United States and the European Union (EU) have expressed
their readiness to withdraw from the previous position that Iran must halt all
enrichment-related activities and to allow Tehran to carry out uranium
conversion on condition that the actual enrichment be performed in Russia.
Just several hours before Aghazadeh's remarks on
keeping enrichment at home, Iran's chief nuclear negotiator Ali Larijanihad
reiterated an open stance previously made public on Friday that the country
would consider a proposal over enrichment abroad if it could facilitate the
nuclear issue.
However, Aghazadeh's remarks, echoed by President
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, shows that Iran had rejected the proposal to outsource
sensitive production abroad that aimed to avert anescalation of tensions on
Tehran's atomic programme."Iran is not favorable towards being sent to the UN
Security Council but it will not accept pressure from the hegemonic powers,"
Ahmadinejad said during his talks with Ivanov, quoted by the student news agency
ISNA.
Uranium conversion is the process of turning uranium
orenicknamed "yellowcake" to uranium hexafluoride gas (UF6), whichcan be fed
into connected centrifuges to yield enriched uranium,the material that can be
used to generate electricity as well asbuild nuclear weapons.
In August, Tehran had rejected European proposal that
Iran giveup enrichment in exchange for economic and technical incentives and
resumed the uranium conversion work, prompting EU trio of Britain, France and
Germany to suspend nuclear talks with Iran.
The IAEA in late September adopted a EU-drafted resolution
to call for Iran's full suspension of enrichment activities and paved the way
for referral of the Iran nuclear issue to the UN Security Council, which could
impose sanctions against Iran. But, the agency has not set a date for the
referral and the IAEA board of governors is due to discuss the Iran nuclear
issue on Nov. 24.
In order to relieve the international pressure,
President Ahmadinejad proposed in September to invite foreign companies in
Iran's uranium enrichment program to keep the process transparent,which has been
sniffed at by the EU and the United States.
The Iranian cabinet on Nov. 2 approved Ahmadinejad's plan
and authorized the AEOI to take measures necessary to attract foreignand
domestic investment.
Aghazadeh, Iran's nuclear chief, said on Nov. 9 that
Iran willallow foreign countries and companies to hold a share as much as 35
percent for investment and practically carry out and monitor Iran's uranium
enrichment program. Enditem
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