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Related: IAEA urges Iran to show more transparency EU offers more time for breaking Iran deadlock Russia to support new IAEA report on
Iranian program
VIENNA, Nov. 24 (Xinhuanet) -- UN nuclear watchdog
the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) is expected to endorse a statement
by the European Union (EU) that calls for resumed talks with Iran over its
nuclear issue.
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| International Atomic Energy Agency chief
Mohammed ElBaradei gestures during a board meeting at the IAEA
headquarters Nov. 24 in Vienna.
(AFP) | The IAEA's
35-nation board of governors, meeting on Thursday, had "unanimous hope that the
negotiation process could resume, taking into account, among different ideas,
the Russian proposals," according to a draft statement submitted by EU's big
three -- France, Britain and Germany.
However, the European Union reserves the right to
call an emergency board meeting before the next scheduled gathering in March if
"a report to the UN Security Council must be made," the statement warned.
IAEA's board of governors began a two-day meeting on
Thursday to discuss the development of Iran's nuclear issue since it called on
Tehran in September to cease all nuclear fuel work, cooperate with an IAEA
investigation and return to talks with the EU.
Earlier, the United States and the EU had decided to
postpone the referral of Tehran's nuclear issue to the UN Security Council for
possible sanctions.
It was hoped that this would give Russia more time to
persuade Tehran to accept a compromise plan, which would require Iran to
transfer its uranium enrichment activities to Russia.
If accepted, the Russian plan would in theory deprive
Iran of the conditions to produce weapons-grade nuclear fuels, thus easing the
international anxiety over Tehran's nuclear program.
Washington and Brussels fear that Iran could use a
civilian nuclear power program to hide covert development of atomic weapons,
which Iran has denied. Enditem
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| Iran's Ambassador to the International
Atomic Energy Agency Ali Asghar Soltanieh looks at his documents during a
board meeting at the IAEA headquarters in Vienna.
(AFP) | |