IAEA Ends Talks with Iran on Resuming Nuclear Inspections

Published: 6 August 2003 y., Wednesday
The three-member legal team from the International Atomic Energy Agency is attempting to get Iran to agree to unrestricted inspections of its nuclear facilities. Iran maintains its nuclear program is solely for the peaceful production of electricity, but the United States has accused Iran of running a secret nuclear weapons program. The Los Angeles Times reported Monday that Iran is attempting to build a nuclear bomb. Some government officials in Iran have recently indicated Tehran would likely accept the tougher international inspections, but conservative hardliners in the country have said Iran's sovereignty is at stake and have suggested Iran withdraw from the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty that allows open inspections. Pakinam el-Shakawry, an Iranian expert who teaches political science at Cairo University, says recent events in the region, including the U.S. occupation of Iraq, have caused a rise in Iranian nationalism that, she says, is hindering efforts to get Tehran to agree to the tougher inspections. "It's not a good time for accepting any additional inspections around its nuclear program," said Ms. el-Shakawry. "Maybe in another time, when the region was not in this crisis, maybe it could be more easy to convince Iran to do such a thing. But now it can be considered that accepting more inspections means that it's accepting a reducing of its national sovereignty. So I think it's a matter of national pride." In June, the International Atomic Energy Agency criticized Iran for concealing many of its nuclear activities, and the IAEA is scheduled to take up the issue of Iran during its September meeting.
Šaltinis: VOA News
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Roundtable discussion on Kazakhstan held in London

A round table on Kazakhstan was held in London in the prestigious political center of the Institute of Economic Relations with participation of Kazakhstani President’s Advisor Yermukhamet Yertysbayev more »

Moldova's Pro-West Communists Win Majority in Parliament

Moldova's pro-Western Communist Party has won a majority in Sunday's parliamentary election, but fell short of winning enough seats to re-elect President Vladimir Voronin more »

FM MITREVA VISITS VATICAN AND ITALY

Macedonian Foreign Minister Ilinka Mitreva met Tuesday with Holy See Secretary of State, Cardinal Angelo Sodano and Secretary for Relations with States, Monsignor Giovanni Lajolo more »

V-Day 60th anniversary in Moscow

PRESIDENTS OF LITHUANIA AND ESTONIA NOT TO ATTEND V-DAY CELEBRATION IN MOSCOW more »

MOLDOVA DEPORTS 46 BELARUSSIANS

The Moldovan authorities have deported 46 Belarussian observers and intend to extradite another 100 Russians more »

Moldova votes for parliament amid Russian discontent

Moldova votes for a new parliament Sunday with the election likely to place the impoverished nation firmly on a pro-European path more »

Ukrainian Interior Affairs Minister Refused to Come to Belarus

Ukrainian Interior Minister Yuri Lutsenko refused to come to Belarus for celebrations on the occasion of the Militia Day more »

FREE-TRADE ZONE

Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbaev and Uzbek President Islam Karimov agreed in a telephone conversation on 3 March to establish a working group to lay the groundwork for a free-trade zone more »

Estonia expects Russia to sign border treaty this spring

Foreign Minister Lang favours taking part in Moscow celebrations in May more »

Chirac begins hard sell on EU constitution as support wanes

PRESIDENT CHIRAC set out yesterday to persuade disgruntled French citizens to put aside their distaste for Europe and his own Government and vote oui to the EU constitution in a referendum more »