| 
World
Bolivia
Venezuela
Trinidad
&
Caribbean










|
|
UN
nuclear watchdog to issue crucial report on Iran
By Michael Adler
AFP
VIENNA
Petroleumworld.com
08 31 06
With Iran still enriching uranium this week, the UN nuclear watchdog
was expected to declare Thursday that Tehran has failed to suspend strategic
nuclear fuel work, opening the door to possible UN sanctions.
Iran started a new round of uranium enrichment only days ahead of the
United Nations deadline on Thursday for it to stop all such activities,
diplomats told AFP.
"They put in small quantities of (feedstock) uranium hexafluoride
(UF6) gas last week," into a cascade line of 164 centrifuges in
Natanz which enrich uranium, a diplomat close to the watchdog International
Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) said Wednesday.
A second diplomat, who like the first asked not to be named due to the
sensitivity of the issue, said the Iranians were doing this "to
underscore the point that they are not going to stop enrichment-related
activities."
He said the amount of UF6 gas being fed was very small, "under
10 kilos", and that the work was continuing this week.
The UN Security Council has demanded that Iran suspend all uranium enrichment
and reprocessing activities by August 31, amid US-led concerns that
Tehran's nuclear programme is a cover for an attempt to produce an atomic
bomb.
The IAEA is verifying Iran's compliance with the deadline and will be
sending a report this Thursday to the Security Council.
Uranium enrichment makes fuel for civilian nuclear reactors but in highly
refined form can serve as the raw material for atom bombs.
Iran insists its nuclear programme aims solely to produce electricity.
Six world powers have also proposed talks on Iran receiving trade, technology
and security benefits if it suspends enrichment.
Tehran said August 21 it was ready for "serious talks", but
did mention halting enrichment, and has made clear that it intends to
pursue nuclear fuel production.
Russia and China are reluctant to impose sanctions, even though US officials
said these two countries have promised to honour a commitment to crack
down on Iran if it refuses the conditions for the international benefits
package.
US Undersecretary of State Nicholas Burns said Wednesday he expected
sanctions to be imposed within a month.
"We believe the sanctions regime will be agreed to in September
by the Security Council and we're going to work towards that with a
great deal of energy and termination," he said on CNN.
US State Department spokesman Sean McCormack said senior officials from
Britain, China, France, Germany, Russia and the United States would
meet in Europe early next week to begin discussing sanctions against
Iran if it is deemed to have flouted the UN deadline.
Diplomats said Iran had paused actual enrichment until last week as
it had been running the centrifuges without the feedstock gas, which
is often done in research work on learning how to enrich.
Iran fed the 164-cascade at Natanz in April and in June, producing small
amounts of enriched uranium suitable for fuel, but far below the quality
and quantity needed for weapons, the IAEA has reported.
Iran is also running a 10-centrifuge and a 20-centrifuge cascade as
part of what is at this point small-scale work, a diplomat close to
the IAEA said.
A diplomat said Iran had been feeding the cascades "periodically",
even though they could have been using them for enrichment continuously.
"They want to show that they are doing enrichment but they don't
want to upset the applecart by sticking it in the face of the West,"
the diplomat said.
The IAEA was also expected to report Thursday that Iran is not fully
cooperating with its inspections.
Iran earlier this month blocked IAEA inspectors from visiting a key
underground site and diplomats said Iranian authorities are making life
increasingly difficult for its investigators in other ways, even if
the UN watchdog is still able to monitor the country's nuclear programme.
But one diplomat said IAEA inspectors were able this week to see the
underground site at Natanz, where there are no centrifuges yet installed
but which is destined to house tens of thousands of the machines for
industrial-level enrichment.
The 164-centrifuge pilot cascade is above ground at Natanz.
In addition, Iran is still not providing information the IAEA has sought
for more than a year on "outstanding issues", such as its
work on improving centrifuges, and possibly military and nuclear-related
activities.
The problems are not yet "deemed to be systematic and obstructionist,"
said a diplomat close to the IAEA.
If they were, the diplomat said, the IAEA board of governors would be
required to act on them as violations of the nuclear Non-Proliferation
Treaty (NPT).
AFP
31 0135 GMT 08 06
Copyright
©2006 AFP.
All Rights Reserved.
Send
this story to a friend
Your
feedback is important to us!
We invite all our readers to share with us
their views and comments about this article.
Write
to editor@petroleumworld.com
Any
question or suggestions, please write to:
editor@petroleumworld.com
Best
Viewed with IE
5.01+
Windows
NT 4.0, '95, '98 and ME +/ 800x600 pixels
|