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Iran vows to
pace up enrichment work
UN would regret
voting sanctions: Nejad
Foreign Desk Report
TEHRAN (Iran)—Iran vowed Sunday to push forward efforts to enrich
uranium and to change its relations with the international nuclear
watchdog after the U.N. Security Council imposed sanctions designed to
stop the country’s disputed nuclear program.
Iran’s hard-line President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said the Security Council
would regret voting in favor of the sanctions, saying he was sorry the
West lost its chance to make amends with Iran. “I am sorry for you who
lost the opportunity for friendship with the nation of Iran. You
yourself know that you cannot damage the nation of Iran an iota,” the
state-run news agency, IRNA, quoted Ahmadinejad as saying. Ahmadinejad
also said the United Nations must accept Iran’s nuclear program and
warned that sanctions would not harm his country. “You have to accept
that Iran has the technology of producing nuclear fuel. And it will
celebrate it in coming anniversary of the 1979 Islamic revolution in
February,” Ahmadinejad was quoted as saying.
Foreign Ministry spokesman Mohammad Ali Hosseini said Iran pledged to
change its relationship with the U.N. nuclear watchdog, the
International Atomic Energy Association. “We are not obliged and it is
not expected that cooperation with the IAEA continues at the same former
level,” Hosseini told reporters. He did not provide details about what
would change. Iran’s parliament on Sunday voted to urge the country’s
administration to revise its cooperation with the IAEA but did not set a
timeline or provide further details. Many legislators chanted “Death to
America” after the vote.
“The government should seriously and strongly continue the important
issue of peaceful nuclear technology with prudence and foresight. It
should never accept such illogical pressures,” more than 200 legislators
said in a statement read on state-run radio. The U.N. Security Council
resolution — the result of two months of tough negotiation — orders all
countries to stop supplying Iran with materials and technology that
could contribute to its nuclear and missile programs. It also freezes
the Iranian assets of 10 key companies and 12 individuals related to
those programs. If Iran refuses to comply, the council warned it would
adopt further nonmilitary sanctions, but the resolution emphasized the
importance of diplomacy in seeking guarantees “that Iran’s nuclear
program is exclusively for peaceful purposes.” |