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UN nuclear experts tackle Iran on arms allegations

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The UN nuclear agency and Tehran met Saturday for talks on allegations of past Iranian weapons work and to seek additional safeguards to allay international concerns over its nuclear ambitions.

The meeting came as the Islamic republic's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, demanded tolerance from critics of President Hassan Rouhani ahead of fresh talks with world powers.

Negotiations between Iran and the Vienna-based International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) are building on a framework deal agreed in November that required Tehran to take six practical steps by next Tuesday.

Fact file on the deal to curb Iran's disputed nuclear programme  taking effect from January 20
Fact file on the deal to curb Iran's disputed nuclear programme, taking effect from January 20
-, -, AFP

Chief inspector Tero Varjoranta and four experts are assessing the implementation of those measures, Iranian Atomic Energy Organisation spokesman Behrouz Kamalvandi said.

A morning meeting was "satisfactory," Kamalvandi said, without giving further details, in remarks reported by the state broadcaster on its website.

There were no immediate comments from the IAEA, but Iranian media said the talks could extend into Sunday if there is major progress.

As an afternoon meeting was underway, at which allegations of "possible military dimensions" to Iran's past nuclear activities could be broached, state news agency IRNA reported.

IAEA director general Yukiya Amano told AFP last month that time is now ripe to ask the "more difficult" questions.

"We certainly wish to include issues with 'possible military dimensions' in future steps," said Amano.

Director General of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)  Yukiya Amano  pictured during an ...
Director General of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), Yukiya Amano, pictured during an interview at the IAEA headquaters in Vienna, Austria, on January 30, 2014
Dieter Nagl, AFP/File

How long this takes "very much depends on Iran. It can be quick or it can be long. It really depends on their cooperation."

Another issue to be discussed is access to the Parchin military facility, suspected of having been used for research pertaining to weapons development.

The November deal, struck after two years of on-off talks, was separate from a landmark agreement reached with world powers the same month that has placed temporary curbs on Iran's nuclear activities.

Implementation of the IAEA deal began in December, when inspectors visited Arak, where the small unfinished heavy water reactor has been hit by delays.

The site is of international concern because Tehran could theoretically extract weapons-grade plutonium from spent fuel if it also builds a reprocessing facility.

The future of Iran's Arak heavy water IR-40 reactor is one of the key points in a landmark nucl...
The future of Iran's Arak heavy water IR-40 reactor is one of the key points in a landmark nuclear deal Tehran recently signed with world powers in Geneva
Hamid Foroutan, ISNA/AFP/File

Iran's atomic chief Ali Akbar Salehi said this week the reactor could be modified to produce less plutonium to "allay the worries."

The second step is to visit the Gachin uranium mine, which has yet to be arranged but must take place before the Tuesday deadline.

Also required is information on future research reactors, identifying sites of new nuclear power plants, and clarification on Iranian statements regarding additional enrichment facilities and laser enrichment technology.

'Tolerance' demanded for Rouhani

The IAEA talks are running in parallel with efforts by the so-called P5+1 group of world powers seeking a comprehensive accord with Iran that would once and for all resolve the decade-long impasse over its nuclear work.

Full cooperation with the IAEA is a key demand of the P5+1 --Britain, China, France, Russia, the United States and Germany -- in that process.

Under the deal, Iran has stopped enriching uranium to medium levels and is converting its current stockpile into a form much more difficult to process into weapons-grade material.

In exchange, it has received limited relief from punishing sanctions which have hard hit its economy.

But the Rouhani government has faced increasing public opposition from establishment hardliners over the deal.

They argue that what Iran gained in the interim deal -- meant to last six months and buy time for diplomacy over a comprehensive accord -- does not offset what it has compromised in its nuclear activities.

Rouhani insists that the deal is bringing down the sanctions regime -- a main campaign promise of the self-proclaimed moderate, who took office in August.

Without touching directly on the nature of the dispute, Khamenei demanded tolerance from the deal's opponents and renewed his confidence in Rouhani.

"Critics must exercise tolerance when it comes to the government," he told air force commanders in remarks reported by one of his websites, leader.ir.

"It has only been a few months since the government has taken the reign," he said. "The statesmen must be given time to push forward strongly with their plans."

Khamenei -- who has final say on all key state affairs, including the nuclear dossier -- himself hailed the deal as a victory for Iran, but remains sceptical of interaction with longtime foe the United States.

Tehran will renew talks with the P5+1 on February 18 aiming at a final deal that will allay the fears of Western powers and Israel that Iran's atomic work masks military objectives, and remove sanctions on Tehran.

The UN nuclear agency and Tehran met Saturday for talks on allegations of past Iranian weapons work and to seek additional safeguards to allay international concerns over its nuclear ambitions.

The meeting came as the Islamic republic’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, demanded tolerance from critics of President Hassan Rouhani ahead of fresh talks with world powers.

Negotiations between Iran and the Vienna-based International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) are building on a framework deal agreed in November that required Tehran to take six practical steps by next Tuesday.

Fact file on the deal to curb Iran's disputed nuclear programme  taking effect from January 20

Fact file on the deal to curb Iran's disputed nuclear programme, taking effect from January 20
-, -, AFP

Chief inspector Tero Varjoranta and four experts are assessing the implementation of those measures, Iranian Atomic Energy Organisation spokesman Behrouz Kamalvandi said.

A morning meeting was “satisfactory,” Kamalvandi said, without giving further details, in remarks reported by the state broadcaster on its website.

There were no immediate comments from the IAEA, but Iranian media said the talks could extend into Sunday if there is major progress.

As an afternoon meeting was underway, at which allegations of “possible military dimensions” to Iran’s past nuclear activities could be broached, state news agency IRNA reported.

IAEA director general Yukiya Amano told AFP last month that time is now ripe to ask the “more difficult” questions.

“We certainly wish to include issues with ‘possible military dimensions’ in future steps,” said Amano.

Director General of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)  Yukiya Amano  pictured during an ...

Director General of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), Yukiya Amano, pictured during an interview at the IAEA headquaters in Vienna, Austria, on January 30, 2014
Dieter Nagl, AFP/File

How long this takes “very much depends on Iran. It can be quick or it can be long. It really depends on their cooperation.”

Another issue to be discussed is access to the Parchin military facility, suspected of having been used for research pertaining to weapons development.

The November deal, struck after two years of on-off talks, was separate from a landmark agreement reached with world powers the same month that has placed temporary curbs on Iran’s nuclear activities.

Implementation of the IAEA deal began in December, when inspectors visited Arak, where the small unfinished heavy water reactor has been hit by delays.

The site is of international concern because Tehran could theoretically extract weapons-grade plutonium from spent fuel if it also builds a reprocessing facility.

The future of Iran's Arak heavy water IR-40 reactor is one of the key points in a landmark nucl...

The future of Iran's Arak heavy water IR-40 reactor is one of the key points in a landmark nuclear deal Tehran recently signed with world powers in Geneva
Hamid Foroutan, ISNA/AFP/File

Iran’s atomic chief Ali Akbar Salehi said this week the reactor could be modified to produce less plutonium to “allay the worries.”

The second step is to visit the Gachin uranium mine, which has yet to be arranged but must take place before the Tuesday deadline.

Also required is information on future research reactors, identifying sites of new nuclear power plants, and clarification on Iranian statements regarding additional enrichment facilities and laser enrichment technology.

‘Tolerance’ demanded for Rouhani

The IAEA talks are running in parallel with efforts by the so-called P5+1 group of world powers seeking a comprehensive accord with Iran that would once and for all resolve the decade-long impasse over its nuclear work.

Full cooperation with the IAEA is a key demand of the P5+1 –Britain, China, France, Russia, the United States and Germany — in that process.

Under the deal, Iran has stopped enriching uranium to medium levels and is converting its current stockpile into a form much more difficult to process into weapons-grade material.

In exchange, it has received limited relief from punishing sanctions which have hard hit its economy.

But the Rouhani government has faced increasing public opposition from establishment hardliners over the deal.

They argue that what Iran gained in the interim deal — meant to last six months and buy time for diplomacy over a comprehensive accord — does not offset what it has compromised in its nuclear activities.

Rouhani insists that the deal is bringing down the sanctions regime — a main campaign promise of the self-proclaimed moderate, who took office in August.

Without touching directly on the nature of the dispute, Khamenei demanded tolerance from the deal’s opponents and renewed his confidence in Rouhani.

“Critics must exercise tolerance when it comes to the government,” he told air force commanders in remarks reported by one of his websites, leader.ir.

“It has only been a few months since the government has taken the reign,” he said. “The statesmen must be given time to push forward strongly with their plans.”

Khamenei — who has final say on all key state affairs, including the nuclear dossier — himself hailed the deal as a victory for Iran, but remains sceptical of interaction with longtime foe the United States.

Tehran will renew talks with the P5+1 on February 18 aiming at a final deal that will allay the fears of Western powers and Israel that Iran’s atomic work masks military objectives, and remove sanctions on Tehran.

AFP
Written By

With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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