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Iran ready
for talks but won't halt enrichment: UN Chief
Foreign Desk Report
TEHRAN (Iran)—President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad wants negotiations on Iran's
nuclear program but won't halt uranium enrichment ahead of talks, U.N.
chief Kofi Annan said Sunday after meeting the Iranian leader.
Annan's two-day visit to Tehran comes after Iran ignored a United
Nations deadline to halt uranium enrichment by the end of August,
opening the door to possible sanctions.
"On the nuclear issue, the president reaffirmed to me Iran's
preparedness and commitment to hold negotiations" with Western powers to
find a solution to the impasse over Tehran's nuclear activities, Annan
told a joint press conference with Iranian Foreign Minister Manoucher
Mottaki.
However, Ahmadinejad "reiterated that he did not accept suspension
before negotiations," the U.N. chief said, conveying Iran's rejection of
a condition set by the five permanent members of the U.N. Security
Council plus Germany.
Ahmadinejad did not attend the press conference or give any statements.
On Saturday — the first day of Annan's visit — he reiterated that Tehran
would continue its nuclear activities.
Iran appeared more responsive to U.N. concerns regarding Lebanon, where
Tehran is a backer of the Hezbollah guerrilla group.
Ahmadinejad "reaffirmed his country's support for the implementation of
resolution 1701," Annan said, referring to the resolution that imposed a
cease-fire in fighting between Israel and Hezbollah and included
measures to prevent the rearming of Islamic militia.
The U.N. chief did not disclose specifics of his talks on the topic with
the Iranian president. After meeting with Annan on Saturday, Mottaki
made a vague promise to support the resolution, but did not directly
mention Hezbollah.
Annan also reiterated his displeasure over an exhibit in Tehran of
cartoons on the Holocaust. The exhibit is a response to the outrage
among Muslims caused by the publication earlier this year of the Danish
cartoons of Islam's Prophet Muhammad.
Earlier Sunday, Iran's Foreign Ministry said the country planned to hold
a conference this fall questioning evidence of the Holocaust.
Ahmadinejad has dismissed the Holocaust as a myth, provoking an
international outcry.
Annan's meeting with the Iranian president came on the final day of his
two-day visit to Iranian capital on a tour that has included stops in
Lebanon, Israel and Syria. He is slated to make stops in Qatar, Saudi
Arabia, Egypt and Turkey. |