The story appears on

Page A10

September 23, 2013

GET this page in PDF

Free for subscribers

View shopping cart

Related News

Home » World

Iran insists uranium rights covered in deal

Iran’s President Hassan Rowhani demanded yesterday that Western governments recognise his country’s right to enrich uranium in any nuclear deal, ahead of his departure for key talks at the United Nations.

Rowhani, a moderate on Iran’s political scene whose election in June had raised Western hopes of a breakthrough in long-stumbling nuclear talks, said a deal was dependent on acceptance of Iran’s enrichment program.

“If they accept these rights, the Iranian people are a rational people, peaceful and friendly. We stand ready to cooperate and together we can settle all the region’s problems and even global ones,” Rowhani said.

His comments, at an annual military parade, came on the eve of his departure for the UN General Assembly in New York where he is scheduled to deliver a keynote address and meet French President Francois Hollande on the sidelines.

Rowhani has said he wants the nuclear talks to resume as quickly as possible but insisted yesterday that they do so “without precondition.”

Rowhani has made several diplomatic overtures since his election in June, and there has been talk that he could also meet US President Barack Obama on the sidelines of the General Assembly, which opens tomorrow.

But Washington warned on Friday that while welcome, the overtures were not enough for it to consider loosening crippling sanctions on Iran’s oil and banking sectors that Rowhani has said he wants eased.

White House national security spokesman Ben Rhodes said Washington was waiting for more concrete evidence that Iran was ready to make concessions.

“We’ve always made clear that we’ll make judgements based on the actions of the Iranian government not just on their words,” he said.

Rhodes said the United States had made it clear “that we do have a preference for resolving this issue diplomatically,” but warned: “We want to make clear that there’s not an open-ended window for diplomacy.”

Rowhani hit back at those comments yesterday, warning Washington that it could “not use the language of war and diplomacy at the same time.”

If there were any attack by Washington or its ally Israel, Iran would riposte “with determinedly until victory,” he warned.

Underlining his comments at an annual military parade, Iran displayed the largest number yet of two missiles it has developed that are theoretically capable of striking targets in Israel or US bases in the Gulf.

Iran paraded 12 Sejil and 18 Ghadr missiles, both with a nominal range of 2,000 kilometers.

Rowhani’s comments also came on the eve of the official handover by its Russian constructors of Iran’s first nuclear power plant at Bushehr on the Gulf coast.

Iranian Atomic Energy Agency chief Ali Akbar Salehi said he expected work to start soon on a second nuclear power plant on completion of talks with Moscow.

“Work will start soon,” he said, without giving a date.

 




 

Copyright © 1999- Shanghai Daily. All rights reserved.Preferably viewed with Internet Explorer 8 or newer browsers.

沪公网安备 31010602000204号

Email this to your friend