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Iran cuts level of ties with IAEA
Foreign Desk Report
TEHRAN—Iran’s parliament passed a bill on Wednesday obliging the
government to “revise” the level of its cooperation with the IAEA
nuclear watchdog after the United Nations approved sanctions on Tehran
over its atomic program.
The U.N. Security Council voted unanimously on Saturday to impose
sanctions on Iran’s trade in sensitive nuclear materials and technology,
in an attempt to stop uranium enrichment work that could produce
material that could be used in bombs.
“The government is obliged to revise its cooperation level with the
International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA),” said the bill, which was
read out during a parliament session broadcast live on state radio.
The bill also obliges President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s government to
“accelerate Iran’s nuclear activities,” in defiance of the council’s
calls to halt nuclear enrichment, which the West fears is a cover to
build atomic weapons. The hardline Guardian Council, a watchdog body,
swiftly approved the bill. Deputy Parliament Speaker Mohammad Reza
Bahonar said it was the first time since the 1979 Islamic revolution
that the council approved a bill in 5 minutes. The bill will take effect
15 days after being signed by the president, who indicated on Sunday
that the resolution, which he called a “piece of torn paper,” would
alter Iran’s relationship with the IAEA.
The bill stopped short of approving demands by some conservative
parliamentarians who wanted a tougher line against the IAEA and an end
to inspections of atomic facilities. Iran’s chief nuclear negotiator,
Ali Larijani, played down the possibility of Iran adopting tough
measures, insisting that Tehran still “wanted to resolve the issue
peacefully.”
“We do not want to adopt radical behaviors ... our policy is to continue
our atomic work based on international laws,” the ISNA students news
agency quoted Larijani as saying. Parliament Speaker Gholamali
Haddadadel said the bill gave the government authority to decide if it
wanted the nuclear standoff to be resolved through political means in
the framework of the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT).
“This bill is a warning to the government not to put the fate of Iran
totally in the hands of the IAEA and react in proportion with imposed
pressures,” he said. “The government’s reaction to international
pressures could also be pulling out of the NPT,” Haddadadel said. Some
analysts disagreed, saying under Iran’s system of clerical rule, Supreme
Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has the last say on state matters, not the
president. “This law does not give any additional power to the
government than what it already has ... ,” political analyst Saeed
Leylaz said. Khamenei has previously said Iran would not yield to
pressure. He has issued a religious decree, saying that making,
stockpiling or using nuclear weapons was against Islamic beliefs, the
official IRNA news agency reported in August 2005. |