Special report: Iran Nuclear Crisis
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Iran's President Ahmadinejad speaks
to the Iranian media during a news conference in Tehran, Nov. 14, 2006.
(Xinhua/AFP Photo) Photo Gallery
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TEHRAN,
Nov. 17 (Xinhua) -- Iran on Friday denied a recent report in the German weekly
magazine Der Spiegel which alleged Tehran had a secret fund to finance its
nuclear activities, the official IRNA news agency reported.
Developing Iran's peaceful nuclear program does not
require the approval of a secret budget, the Embassy of the Islamic Republic of
Iran in Berlin said in a statement.
All of Iran's nuclear activities are under the
supervision of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) and there have been
no references about secret activities in IAEA reports, the statement said.
"On the issue of the construction of a new nuclear
power plant, we state that there is no need for secrecy since the IAEA is
supporting the rights of countries to use peaceful nuclear energy," it said.
Furthermore, if Iran would want to undertake such
steps, it could announce and act openly, the statement added.
Der Spiegel, citing information from telephone calls
of a top Iranian official on a line tapped by a Western intelligence service,
reported on Monday that Iran may have set aside a secret fund of 418 million
U.S. dollars for its nuclear operations.
The money would be used to upgrade the defense of
Iranian nuclear facilities around the country, especially for tunneling projects
because Iran's leadership fears a U.S. or Israeli surprise attack, the German
magazine reported.
Other intended uses for the fund are the production
of dozens of new centrifuges for uranium enrichment and the construction of a
secret new nuclear plant at an unknown location, the report said.
The United States has been seeking to impose
sanctions on Iran through the UN Security Council on the grounds that Tehran is
developing a nuclear-weapon program under the guise of a civilian-use program.
Iran has insisted that its nuclear program is for
peaceful purposes and voiced hope for talks on the nuclear standoff. But the
Islamic Republic rejected a prerequisite of suspending nuclear work for such
talks.
U.S. calls for sanctions against
Iran
WASHINGTON, Nov. 17 (Xinhua) -- The United States
reiterated on Friday its call for passing a resolution to impose sanctions on
Iran for refusing to stop enrichment of uranium.
"It's time to get on with it," Undersecretary of State
Nicholas Burns said of the stalemate in the United Nations Security Council
after three weeks of debate. Full Story

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