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Key UN powers unveil Iran sanctions
draft
By
Gerard Aziakou
AFP
UNITED
NATIONS
Petroleumworld.com 10 26 06
Key Western UN powers have unveiled proposed sanctions that would target
Iran's nuclear and missile programs over its failure to halt sensitive
nuclear fuel work, diplomats said Wednesday.
A Security Council resolution drafted by envoys of Britain, France and
Germany in consultations with the United States, was presented to the
Russian and Chinese ambassadors late Tuesday, they added.
According to the draft, a copy of which was obtained by AFP, the Security
Council would invoke Article 41 of Chapter Seven of the UN Charter which
calls for sanctions not involving the use of force.
The text proposes that UN member states "take necessary measures
to prevent the supply, sale or transfer directly or indirectly from
their territories or by their nationals ... of all items, materials,
equipment, goods and technology which could contribute to Iran's nuclear
and ballistic missile programs."
The states are also urged "to take the necessary measures to prevent
the provision to Iran of technical assistance or training, financial
assistance, investment brokering or other services and the transfer
of financial resources or services related to Iran's nuclear or ballistic
missile programs."
The draft warns that the council would "consider further measures"
if Iran still refuses to comply with a demand that it freeze uranium
enrichment, a process used to produce fuel for nuclear reactors but
which, if extended, can also provide the raw material for bombs.
China's UN delegate Li Junhua told reporters that the French, British
and German envoys "would like to have an initial consultation tomorrow
(Thursday) among the council's five veto-wielding members (P5) -- Britain,
China, France, Russia and the United States -- plus Germany.
"It's premature to say that the council is in a position to impose
sanctions," he added.
But in Washington, US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice urged the
15-member council to immediately slap sanctions on Iran or face losing
its credibility.
"For the international community to be credible, it must pass a
resolution now that holds Iran accountable for its defiance," she
said.
Iran's Islamic regime should pay close attention to the wide-ranging
sanctions being imposed on North Korea since it carried out its first
test of a nuclear bomb on October 9," Rice told the conservative
Heritage Foundation think tank.
"Iran can now see that the path North Korea is choosing is not
leading to more prestige or more prosperity or more security; it's leading
to just the opposite," she added.
But diplomats here cited disagreements between Washington and its European
allies during consultations over whether the draft should call for a
suspension of Russian assistance to Iran's Bushehr nuclear power station.
The sanctions proposed by the Europeans Wednesday exempt the Bushehr
project, diplomats said.
China and Russia, which have significant economic interests in Iran,
are reluctant to slap tough measures on Tehran, and a Western diplomat
made it clear that Moscow was certain to oppose any call to suspend
aid to Bushehr.
Monday, State Department spokesman Sean McCormack said Security Council
deliberations on the sanctions against Iran were likely to last for
several weeks.
Russia has also indicated that agreement on an acceptable text was likely
to take some time.
Western powers fear Iran's uranium enrichment could be diverted to make
nuclear weapons, but the Islamic republic insists its nuclear program
is solely aimed at generating electricity.
Last June the P5 and Germany drew up a list of 15 possible punitive
measures against Iran as part of a "carrots and sticks" package
that also included economic and security incentives if Tehran agreed
to suspend uranium enrichment.
The six powers have been considering gradual but reversible sanctions,
firstly targetting Iran's military programs and later, if these fail,
moving to broader political and economic sanctions.
Meanwhile an official from the Russian company heading the Bushehr project
said Wednesday that the project had been delayed for technical reasons.
Last month, Russia and Iran officially agreed on a 12-month deadline
for completing the controversial project, despite earlier pressure from
Tehran that the station be completed in half that time.
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has meanwhile repeatedly stated
that Iran has no plan to halt its uranium enrichment and has noted that
the Islamic republic is not far from doing so on a larger scale.
And Iran on Wednesday confirmed it has installed new equipment to step
up uranium enrichment work despite the threat of UN sanctions.
AFP
25 2042 GMT 10 06
Copyright©
2006 AFP. All Rights Reserved.
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