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07 May 2004 Friday 16 Rabi-ul-Awwal 1425



Iran moving in right direction: IAEA


PARIS, May 6: Iran is making progress towards full cooperation with the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), its head Mohamed ElBaradei said on Thursday, but warned that the world would not wait forever for results.

"Overall I think we are moving in the right direction," the IAEA director-general told a foreign relations committee of French parliament during a visit to Paris. "But Iran also has to understand that the world is not going to wait forever for them to come clean," Mr ElBaradei said. "There is also the credibility of the verification, and people are getting a bit impatient."

Iran reiterated on Wednesday that it would stick to its commitments to cooperate with the IAEA over its nuclear programme, to ensure that it was not harbouring a covert weapons programme.

With IAEA inspectors due to report on Tehran's activities by the end of May, Foreign Minister Kamal Kharazi, speaking in Berlin on Wednesday, pledged: "We will fulfil our commitments on the nuclear programme."

Mr ElBaradei said cooperation had improved since October, when Iran gave the IAEA what it said was a complete declaration of its nuclear activities, but the dossier was later found to have significant omissions such as advanced "P2" centrifuges that can make arms-grade uranium.

Mr ElBaradei has called the P2 revelation a "setback" in Iran's cooperation with the agency, but used softer language in describing Iran's cooperation to French parliamentarians.

"There are still some hiccups in the cooperation, but overall I think we are moving in the right direction," he said. He also recalled Tehran's suspension of inspections in March "after a resolution by our board of governors which they did not like."

The IAEA resolution condemned Iran for failing to report crucial technologies such as designs for sophisticated centrifuges that can produce weapons-grade uranium.

"Iran's political situation is very complex," Mr ElBaradei noted. "There are the hardliners, the moderates, those who would like to see cooperation with the West and those who are not necessarily keen on that."

Tehran vigorously denies US and Israeli charges that it is seeking nuclear weapons, and is pressing for its dossier to be taken off the top of the IAEA's agenda during the June meeting - something that most diplomats say is highly unlikely. Mr ElBaradei was to meet later Thursday with French Foreign Minister Michel Barnier. -AFP/Reuters

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