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No suspension offer in EU talks, says Iran
TEHRAN--Iran has denied it had made any offer to suspend uranium
enrichment in talks between EU foreign policy chief Javier Solana and
its top nuclear negotiator Ali Larijani.
Foreign ministry spokesman Mohammad Ali Hosseini dismissed "reports of a
suspension of uranium enrichment by us" in the talks on the nuclear
crisis as "merely guesswork".
There had been conflicting reports over whether Iran made an offer in
the EU talks to suspend enrichment for a limited time, with some EU
diplomats suggesting it had proposed a two-month suspension of the
sensitive process.
"The Islamic Republic of Iran wants to have negotiations and dialogue in
order to reach a just solution that ensures Iran's legitimate rights and
(Iran) is patiently pursuing this," Hosseini added Sunday.
The foreign ministry also warned its arch foe the United States, which
is leading a drive to take the issue to the Security Council and has
expressed fear Iran could be stalling, not to interfere in the process.
"Some parties' haste to use illogical means, push the nuclear dossier
along the path of bullying, employ useless expressions about 'buying
time' or setting an unreal deadline is contrary to the current trend,"
the spokesman said.
Larijani and Solana failed to reach an agreement at their latest talks
last week in Berlin but Hosseini described the process as "constructive"
and expressed hope the trend would continue.
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who the day earlier had ruled out even
offering a short term suspension of uranium enrichment, on Sunday again
insisted the Islamic republic would not renounce its nuclear rights.
"Iran insists on exercising its peaceful right to nuclear energy in line
with international agreements," he said according to state television.
The main stumbling block in talks with the European Union has been EU
and US demands that Iran suspend enrichment, a process that can be used
to make both nuclear fuel and the explosive core of a nuclear bomb.
Iran insists its nuclear programme is solely for peaceful energy needs,
vehemently rejecting US allegations it is seeking to manufacture nuclear
weapons.
Tehran now faces a new deadline from world powers of early October for
it to halt enriching uranium, diplomats said.--Agencies |