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Related: Iran's parliament approves new oil minister
TEHRAN, Dec. 11 (Xinhuanet) -- Iran announced on Sunday that the stranded bilateral negotiations with the European Union (EU) over the country's nuclear program would be reopened on Dec. 21 in Vienna.
"The upcoming negotiations will be very important,
and the future development (of the Iranian nuclear issue) will depend on them,"
Foreign Ministry spokesman Hamid-Reza Asefi told reporters at his weekly news
briefing.
Asefi said Iran expects to secure its legal rights on
peaceful nuclear technology which are enshrined by related international
conventions, adding that the claim on such legal rights should not be "a reason
for concerns."
The bilateral nuclear negotiations, which started
after Tehran suspended all activities related to uranium enrichment in November
2004, came to a pause in early August when Iran defiantly resumed uranium
conversion activities, a preparatory stage for enrichment.
The two sides agreed to resume the talks after the
International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) decided on Nov. 24 to postpone the
referral of Iran's case to the United Nations Security Council in order to give
extra chance for the EU to save its efforts on a diplomatic solution to the
issue.
The EU, which has been trying hard to dissuade Iran
from its work to build nuclear fuel cycles, is expected to press Iran on an
alleged Russian proposal, which allows Iran to conduct uranium conversion
activities in exchange for the country's transfer of enrichment process to
Russia, a measure keeping Tehran from obtaining nuclear technology crucial to
making atom bombs.
However, Tehran resolutely rejected the proposal,
insisting that its enrichment work must be performed in its own territory.
Meanwhile, Iran has also showed impatience on the suspension of the enrichment
work and vowed to resume it in the near future.
But Gholamreza Aghazadeh, Vice-President and head of
Iran's Atomic Energy Organization, promised on Saturday that Iran would not
start the enrichment during the upcoming negotiations with the EU.
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