Iran's
vows to win nuclear tussle with West
AFP
Iran
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad
TEHRAN
Petroleumworld.com Jan 31, 2008
A defiant President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said on
Wednesday that Tehran was close to its target of producing nuclear energy and
launched a new tirade against Israel as world powers seek to impose new sanctions
on Iran.
"The nuclear issue was the most important challenge since the (1979 Islamic)
revolution but with the help of God and your resistance, it is ending in favour
of the Iranian nation," Ahmadinejad told cheering crowds.
"We are moving towards the summit on the nuclear path," he said.
"Iranians... will not back down one iota in defence of their rights," he
said in a speech in Bushehr, the site of Iran's first nuclear power plant which
Tehran said on Wednesday is to be commissioned in October.
Iran has been slapped with two sets of UN sanctions for its refusal to halt uranium
enrichment and a third package is currently being considered by the Security
Council.
The West fears that Iran is using its nuclear drive to try to build atomic weapons,
a charge Tehran has consistently denied, saying it is aimed at generating electricity.
Uranium enrichment is a process which makes nuclear fuel but can also be diverted
to produce the fissile core of atomic bombs.
The Security Council on Monday held informal talks on a third sanctions resolution,
a draft of which was agreed by the five veto-wielding permanent members -- Britain,
China, France, Russia and United States -- plus Germany.
The proposed new measures include an outright travel ban by officials involved
in Tehran's nuclear and missile programmes and inspections of shipments to and
from Iran if there are suspicions of prohibited goods.
Ahmadinejad also renewed his verbal attack on arch-foe Israel, saying its days
are numbered and predicting that the "filthy Zionist entity" will fall
sooner or later.
Widely considered to be the Middle East's sole if undeclared nuclear power, Israel
accuses the Islamic republic of trying to develop atomic weapons under the guise
of its nuclear programme.
"I advise you to abandon the filthy Zionist entity which has reached the
end of the line," Ahmadinejad told world powers of the Jewish state which
Tehran does not recognise.
"It has lost its reason to be and will sooner or later fall," he predicted. "The
ones who still support the criminal Zionists should know that the occupiers'
days are numbered."
Israel has called for tougher sanctions on Tehran and its Prime Minister Ehud
Olmert has said all options are on the table to prevent "an Iranian bomb."
Diplomats in New York, meanwhile, said approval of the sanctions package, presented
to the council's 10 non-permanent members on Friday, was likely to take several
weeks.
Iran insists the International Atomic Energy Agency, whose board of governors
meets in March, will confirm that its nuclear activities have not deviated toward
weapons development.
Despite a four-year probe into Tehran's atomic drive, the UN nuclear watchdog
has so far been unable to certify whether it is peaceful.
But in January 13, the IAEA announced that Iran had agreed to clear up remaining
questions on its nuclear programme -- including any military activity -- by mid-February.
As a signatory to the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, Iran says it has a right
to the nuclear fuel cycle, while its first nuclear power plant, built by Russia
in the southern Gulf city of Bushehr, is yet to go online.
An Iranian official told reporters on Wednesday that the Bushehr plant would
be commissioned in October 2008.
Ahmad Fayazbakhsh, managing director of Iran's Production and Development of
Nuclear Energy Company, said the date for the plant's electricity to join the
national power grid would be announced after the commissioning.
Russia completed fuel deliveries for the plant on Monday and said it would "ideally" go
online this year.
Fayazbakhsh said that Russia still had to send about 1,900 tonnes of equipment
including precision instruments and ventilation systems for the plant.
After delivering the first shipment of fuel in December, Russia said Iran no
longer needed to pursue its own uranium enrichment, a message repeated by US
President George W. Bush.
Story by
Hiedeh Farmani from
AFP
AFP
301144 GMT 01 08
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