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Special report: Iran Nuclear Crisis
TEHRAN, March 6 (Xinhuanet) -- Iranian President
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said on Monday that Iran would never submit to outside
pressure against its nuclear program, state media reported.
"Pressure will have no effect on Iran's process of decision making," Ahmadinejad was quoted by the official IRNA
news agency as saying.
The president made the remarks on early Monday
morning, just hours prior to a board meeting of the International Atomic Energy
Agency (IAEA), the UN's nuclear watchdog, over Iran's nuclear issue.
Ahmadinejad warned that tough measures taken by
western countries would just run counterproductive, according to IRNA.
He reiterated that Iran's nuclear activities were
carried out within the framework of related international regulations and that
Iran was expecting western powers to respect the will of the Iranian nation.
"We want to see a peaceful and tranquil world and
therefore, we want to work on the basis of international regulations,"
Ahmadinejad said, adding that Iran would "neither use coercion nor accept force
imposed on it."
Shortly after Ahmadinejad's comments, the IAEA's
board meeting began in Vienna.
Right before the meeting, the IAEA chief Mohamed
ElBaradei said that he was hopeful a deal over Iran's nuclear program could be
reached in the next week or so.
"I am still very much hopeful that in the next week
or so an agreement can be reached," he told reporters.
There are contacts going on in a bid to reach an
agreement on modality for Iran and the Europeans to go back to the negotiating
table, said ElBaradei.
The IAEA adopted a resolution in early February to
report Iran's case to the UN Security Council but called on the council to
withhold punitive actions until Monday's meeting.
Iran's chief nuclear negotiator Ali Larijani warned
on Sunday that the Islamic Republic would have to resume large-scale uranium
enrichment if hauled to the UN Security Council.
Iranian government spokesman Gholam-Hossein Elham on
Monday urged the IAEA to "judge Iran's nuclear case on the basis of facts and
law and not to be subdued by political demands of certain countries."
The tension over Iran's nuclear issue has hiked since
Tehran resumed nuclear fuel research work on Jan. 10 and the crisis escalated as
Iran prohibited the IAEA's snap inspections and resumed small-scale enrichment
work, a retaliative move against the IAEA's February resolution.
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