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May 03, 2007
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Thursday
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Rabi-us-Sani 15, 1428
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UN conference suspended after Iranian objections
VIENNA, May 2: A UN conference considering ways to improve the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty suspended its work on Wednesday following Iranian objections to a call for full compliance with the NPT.
Conference chairman Japanese ambassador Yukiya Amano told the meeting that Thursday morning's session had been cancelled but would resume in the afternoon.
“I am still conducting intensive consultations and I need some more time,” Amano told the meeting in Vienna of the 189-nation NPT.
Diplomats have said they feared the Vienna meeting could descend into procedural wrangling as happened at the last review conference in New York in May 2005.
But in Vienna, Iranian ambassador Ali Asghar Soltanieh told reporters on Wednesday that Tehran's position had not changed regarding its opposition to the NPT conference's agenda item on full compliance with the treaty.
On Monday, Soltanieh surprised the opening session when he insisted that the agenda item could “create disputes by creating too much focus on one country. We don't want a direction given” against Iran.
Iran is isolated here, as both non-aligned states and Western powers want the debate to go ahead.
Their view is that there is nothing exceptional about calling for compliance with the NPT at a conference looking at ways to reinforce the treaty, several diplomats said.
The Vienna meeting is the first of a series of preparatory conferences ahead of the next general review in 2010 of the NPT. The landmark 1970 treaty remains the main legal barrier to the spread of nuclear weapons.
The hitch at the UN conference comes as US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice arrived in Sharm el-Sheikh in Egypt ahead of a two-day conference on Iraq.
Rice has said she is ready to discuss the standoff over Iran's nuclear programme with Iranian Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki, who is also attending the conference.
On Tuesday however, Mostavafi said the conditions were not right for a dialogue.In a speech in London on Wednesday, UN under secretary of state Nicholas Burns warned that Iran had to enter negotiations over its nuclear programme or face increasing international isolation.
“We have a choice of confronta--
tion or diplomacy; we prefer diplomacy,” Burns said.
Announcing the delay to the talks in Vienna, Amano told reporters: “The parties here need time to think. We are working very hard. It's complicated.” He said he had included the clause on compliance, and one on answering an Arab call for Israel to join the NPT, in order to make the process forward looking.
“So I made the (agenda) proposal and at this stage I don't think I need to change it,” Amano said.
One Middle Eastern diplomat said Iran felt the agenda was designed against them.
But he said there should be a solution by the end of the first week in order to save the second week of the two-week conference.
“It depends what point Iran is trying to take. They are trying to make things difficult for everyone,” the diplomat said.
“But taking it to the brink and taking responsibility for the collapse of the prepcom (NPT preparatory committee meeting) is a different matter,” the diplomat said.
But in the end, he added, Iran “always tries to work out things under the cover of international diplomacy.” Soltanieh said Iran was “prepared to have useful, constructive discussion” but insisted on a new agenda.
“Any other proposal which will
have consensus, we will approve,” he said.
Non-aligned nations were urging Iran to put off this fight until a UN nuclear watchdog meeting in June.
“But Iran says they must stand on principle now, to avoid precedents,” a non-aligned diplomat said.—AFP
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