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TEHRAN, Jan. 7 (Xinhuanet) -- Iran said on Saturday that coming
nuclear negotiations with the European Union (EU) should not be influenced by
Tehran's decision to resume nuclear fuel research, stressing that there was no
legal basis to oppose the move.
"Iran's decision to restart nuclear research,
which is a right of every member state to the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT),
should not have any influence on the process of the talks," Deputy Foreign
Minister Mahdi Mostafavi was quoted by the semi-official Mehr news agency as
saying.
Mostafavi said there was no legal obstruction to the resumption,
reiterating that Iran will continue its "close cooperation with the
International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) as before."
"We have announced that we want to restart nuclear research
work, in line with our rights in the NPT and under the full supervision of the
IAEA, and the agency is tasked with helping us in this regard," Mostafavi
added.
Mostafavi's comments came as the EU said in a statement that
Tehran's decision to resume fuel research "can only seriously jeopardize the
possibility of a return to negotiations."
The decision was announced by Mohammad Saidi, deputy chief of
the country's Atomic Energy Agency, on Tuesday, and in the meantime the IAEA
confirmed that it was informed the resumption will take place on Jan. 9.
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said on Wednesday that the
Islamic Republic would "not retreat even one step" from its decision, while Ali
Larijani, Iran's chief nuclear negotiator, said that the decision was "not
negotiable."
Iran and the EU trio of Britain, France and Germany are due to
hold a new round of negotiations on Jan. 18, during which the EU is expected to
pressurize Tehran on a recent Russian proposal to conduct its uranium enrichment
in Russia.
The nuclear negotiations were stranded for months due to Iran's
resumption of uranium conversion activities, a precursor to uranium enrichment,
last August, but the Russian proposal created an opportunity for the two sides
to return to the negotiating table.
However, Iran has remained tough on its position that uranium
enrichment must be performed in its own territory, terming it as a principle to
accept any proposal.
Earlier in the day, Hossein Entezami, spokesman for Iran's
Supreme National Security Council, was quoted by the state television as saying
that a Russian delegation had arrived in Tehran as planned and in the morning
began talks with Iranian officials on the proposal.
Entezami's remarks denied a previous media report that the
meeting had been postponed.
He said the two sides would "discuss Russia's proposal for joint
uranium enrichment and also enrichment on the Iranian soil."
Based on Washington's accusation that Iran is seeking nuclear
weapons secretly, the EU insists that Iran's complete command of uranium
enrichment could lead to military use of the
technology. Enditem |