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November 18, 2003
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Tuesday
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Ramazan 22, 1424
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Iran says no reason for reporting to UN: Israel worried over N-plan
BRUSSELS, Nov 17: A top Iranian security official said on Monday there were no grounds to report Iran to the UN Security Council over its nuclear programme and he did not expect such a move.
Hassan Rohani, secretary of Iran’s National Security Council, told reporters after talks with key EU foreign ministers: “Iran’s dossier on our peaceful nuclear programme leaves no justification, no reason for our case to be sent to the Security Council. Therefore I have no concerns whatsoever.”
The United States wants the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) board to declare this week that Tehran has breached its obligations under the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty and refer it to the Security Council for possible sanctions. European Union officials oppose such a move.
ISRAEL WORRIED: Iran’s nuclear programme poses the biggest threat to Israel’s existence since the country’s creation more than five decades ago, the chief of the Mossad overseas intelligence agency warned MPs on Monday.
In a rare appearance before the Knesset’s foreign affairs and defence committee, Meir Dagan said Iran was close to the “point of no return” in developing nuclear arms.
The programme was “the biggest threat to Israel’s existence since its creation” in 1948, he was quoted as saying.
During a visit to Washington last week, Israeli Defence Minister Shaul Mofaz warned that Iran would reach a “point of no return” in its nuclear programme within a year unless there were concerted efforts to stop it.
“Concentrated efforts are needed to delay, to stop or to prevent the Iranian nuclear programme,” he said in a speech.
The International Atomic Energy Agency released a report last week accusing Iran of conducting two decades of covert nuclear activities, including plutonium manufacture, though it said there was no evidence as yet it was trying to build a nuclear bomb.
Since the collapse of Saddam Hussein’s regime in Iraq, Israel has come to regard the Islamic fundamentalist administration in Tehran as its number one enemy.
Iran’s former foreign minister Ali Akbar Velayati, now a top adviser to supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, was quoted as saying last week that the mere existence of Israel is contrary to Tehran’s national interests.
Israel, like the United States, accuses Iran of using a civil atomic energy programme as a cover to develop nuclear weapons.—Reuters/AFP
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