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| Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad surveys the nuclear power plant in Bushehr, Iran, February 1, 2006. (Xinhua/Reuters) | TEHRAN, Feb. 4 (Xinhuanet) -- Iranian President
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad ordered an end to snap inspection on its nuclear facilities
from Sunday in reaction to the UN nuclear watchdog's decision to report Iran to
the U.N. Security Council, state television announced late Saturday.
In a letter to chief of Iran's Atomic Energy
Organization Gholamreza Aghazadeh, Ahmadinejad ordered an end to the
implementation of the additional protocol of the nuclear Non-Proliferation
Treaty (NPT) as of Sunday, the report said.
"As of Sunday, the voluntary implementation of the
additional protocol and other cooperative measures beyond the NPT must be
suspended according to the law," Ahmadinejad was quoted as saying.
Ahmadinejad's order was issued shortly after an
emergency meeting of IAEA board of governors adopted a resolution to report
Iran's nuclear issue to the UN Security Council.
The additional protocol, signed by the Iranian
government in December 2003 but never ratified by the Iranian Majlis
(Parliament), allows snap inspections of nuclear sites by the International
Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).
The Majlis passed a law last November which requires
the government to cease all voluntary confidence-building measures including
implementation of the additional protocol if the country's nuclear case were
referred to the UN Security Council.
Ahmadinejad said that Iran would press on with
research and development of nuclear technology and get ready to use it for
peaceful purposes.
However, he did not definitely mention the resumption
of uranium enrichment, just promising that all peaceful nuclear activities would
be carried out within the framework of the IAEA regulations, the NPT clauses and
the Safeguard Agreement.
The hardline president said the IAEA's resolution was
adopted under the pressure of certain countries and did not have any legal
justification.
Dispute over Iran's nuclear program has intensified
since Tehran resumed nuclear fuel research on Jan. 10, regardless of warnings of
the European Union (EU) which has been negotiating with Iran in the past two
years but broke off the talks after Iran restarted uranium conversion, a
precursor to enriching uranium into fuel, last August.
Javad Vaeedi, deputy head of Iran's Supreme National
Security Council and chief delegate to the IAEA meeting, said after the adoption
of the resolution that Iran would no longer consider a Russian proposal to move
Iran's uranium enrichment to Russia to prevent Iran from acquiring materials for
making nuclear weapons.
Tehran suspended all activities related to uranium
enrichment in November 2004 to pave the way for negotiations with the EU trio of
Britain, France and Germany.
The United States has accused Iran of secretly
developing nuclear weapons and the EU has been persuading Iran to give up
uranium enrichment which can be used to fuel power plant or make atom bomb under
certain conditions.
But Iran rejected the charge and insisted that its
nuclear program is fully for peaceful purposes and aimed at meeting rising
domestic demand for electricity. Enditem |