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Tehran (AFP) Sept 7, 2009 President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad on Monday ruled out talks on Iran's "undeniable" nuclear rights, as world powers await Tehran's new proposals for the basis of fresh talks on its controversial atomic drive. "In our view the nuclear question is finished. We will not negotiate over Iran's undeniable rights," the hardliner told a Tehran news conference. "What we have announced is cooperation in two parts: cooperation on peaceful use of clean atomic energy and preventing a proliferation of atomic weapons," Ahmadinejad said. Iran's uranium enrichment work is at the centre of the standoff with the international community as the process can be used to make nuclear fuel as well as the fissile core of an atom bomb. Tehran insists it has a right to enrich uranium to make nuclear fuel as a signatory to the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, and vehemently denies seeking a bomb. Ahmadinejad said Tehran would continue cooperating with the UN nuclear watchdog International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), which has been probing Iran's nuclear programme for years. But "if anyone wants to interfere in the nuclear programme beyond the law, that path is blocked," he warned. "From our point of view the nuclear file does not exist.. but what exists is the file of animosity." He underlined the Islamic republic's stand just hours before the IAEA board of governors gathered in Vienna for a meeting to probe claims that Iran conducted experiments aimed at making a nuclear bomb. IAEA chief Mohamed Elbaradei said at the start of the meeting that there was a "stalemate" with Iran over the nuclear issue and urged Tehran to "substantially re-engage" with the IAEA. Elbaradei said: "Iran has not cooperated with the agency in connection with the remaining issues, detailed fully and completely in the agency's reports, which need to be clarified in order to exclude the possibility of there being military dimensions to Iran's nuclear programme." Ahmadinejad said Tehran was ready for talks on global issues in what he called a "fair and logical" framework, and that he was willing to hold a public meeting with US President Barack Obama in the presence of mass media. He suggested that this could take place at the UN General Assembly in New York later this month. "Any issue can be discussed but in front of media," he said, adding that Iran will also "hold talks with the United States at different levels if it serves Iranians' interests." Iran is due to present a set of proposals to world powers which have offered talks over its nuclear programme but have also threatened further sanctions if negotiations fail. "Our package of proposals is in response to their request of resuming talks," Ahmadinejad said, adding that Iran's proposal was ready to be submitted to Britain, China, France, Germany, Russia and the United States. Western powers have given a late September deadline to Tehran for holding talks over the atomic programme. Ahmadinejad told European countries and the United States to "climb down from fragile glass towers," "change their attitude" towards Iran and "recognise nations' rights." "They will not benefit from continuing previous policies. But we are prepared for both states," he said and added that "if they (world powers) change their approach, they would gain more." In his latest report on the IAEA's six-year-old investigation into Iran's controversial programme, ElBaradei complained that one of the main sticking points remained Tehran's refusal to cooperate on the issue of the so-called alleged studies of nuclear weaponisation. This comprises documentation from intelligence sources that suggest Iran was trying to develop a nuclear warhead. Iran has repeatedly dismissed the allegations as "baseless" and described the evidence used to support the charges as "fabricated." Tehran insists that Washington's intelligence on the alleged weaponisation studies is forged, and says the United States has not handed over any original documents to support its accusations. Elbaradei on Monday dismissed allegations by some of IAEA's member states, especially France, that he withheld key evidence on Iran's alleged weaponisation studies as "politically motivated and totally baseless." Paris insisted the IAEA had been withholding information on Iran. "France attended a technical briefing at the agency," foreign ministry spokeswoman Christine Pages said on Monday. "All of this information was not reflected in the report" released by the IAEA last month, she charged. Share This Article With Planet Earth
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![]() ![]() Tehran (AFP) Sept 5, 2009 Iran has charged that Washington provided forged intelligence to the UN nuclear watchdog claiming that Tehran studied how to make atomic bomb, as world powers pressured the Islamic republic to resume talks on its nuclear drive. State news agency IRNA quoted a senior official on Saturday as saying the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) had been given documents by Washington that lacked ... read more |
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