Special report: Iran Nuclear
Crisis
HELSINKI, June 5 (Xinhua) -- Visiting French Prime
Minister Dominique de Villepin on Monday urged Iran not to use uranium for
military purpose and an early date for a solution over its nuclear program.
Villepin, who arrived here Sunday for a two-day
working visit, made the appeal to Tehran at a press conference after talks with
his Finnish counterpart Matti Vanhanen.
On Thursday, foreign ministers of the five permanent
members of the UN Security Council -- the United States, France, Britain, Russia
and China -- plus Germany agreed upon a European offer of incentives if Iran
halts uranium enrichment and punishments if Tehran does not comply to solve the
current standoff over its nuclear program.
Javier Solana, foreign policy chief of the European
Union (EU), arrived in Tehran late Monday to present Europe's new proposal to
resolve the issue.
On the hindered EU constitution, Villepin said there
would be no change in his country until the presidential election to be held
next spring.
The proposed EU constitution was rejected last year
by France and the Netherlands. Under EU rules, all 25 member states must ratify
the constitution before it comes into force.
Finland is to take over the rotating EU presidency in
the second half of the year. Villepin said he hoped the EU would be able to make
progress on energy, social affairs and employment during Finland's upcoming
six-month presidency of the bloc. Enditem