Special
report:Iran Nuclear
Crisis
TEHRAN, July 2 (Xinhua) -- Iran again refused on Sunday a western deadline to respond to a
six-nation package aimed at defusing a nuclear standoff.
"We don't think statements of deadline on the package
are constructive, they are not going to resolve the problem and we decide to
give a response next month," Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Hamid Reza Asefi
said at his weekly press conference. Asefi also rejected allegations that Iran
was trying to delay the response.
"There are some ambiguities that need to be discussed
with the Europeans, we need to carefully study it and it takes time, so we are
not wasting time and this is not our tactic," Asefi said.
He announced that Iran's top nuclear negotiator Ali
Larijani and EU foreign policy chief Javier Solana will meet on Wednesday in a
bid to remove ambiguities in the package.
Western powers on Thursday exerted mounting pressure
on Iran to formally respond in a week to the package which demanded suspension
of Iranian uranium enrichment activities.
"We are looking forward to a clear and substantive
Iranian response to these proposals at the planned meeting," foreign ministers
of the Group of Eight (G8) industrialized countries said in a statement in
Moscow.
But Iranian Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki
immediately responded in New York that Tehran would not give a response to the
proposals before August.
On June 6, Solana presented the package backed by the
five permanent members of the UN Security Council plus Germany to Iran. The
proposals include both incentives to persuade Iran to suspend uranium enrichment
and possible sanctions if Iran does not comply.
Iran has vowed not to give up its legal right to
enriching uranium for peaceful end and rejected preconditions for nuclear
negotiations. Enditem