Tehran to process uranium

Published November 3, 2005

BERLIN, Nov 2: Iran will process a new batch of uranium at its Isfahan nuclear plant beginning next week, despite pressure from the United States and European Union to halt all sensitive nuclear work, diplomats said on Wednesday.

“Beginning next week, the Iranians will start a new phase of uranium conversion at Isfahan. They will begin feeding a new batch of uranium into the plant,” a European diplomat familiar with the result of inspections by the UN nuclear watchdog told Reuters on condition of anonymity.

Accused by western nations of running a covert atomic weapons programme, Iran had frozen all work at Isfahan late last year under a deal with France, Britain and Germany. But it resumed work at the plant in August, prompting the EU’s three biggest powers to suspend talks with the Islamic republic.

Iran denies wanting nuclear weapons, insisting its atomic ambitions are limited to the peaceful generation of electricity.

However, it has acknowledged concealing many nuclear activities from the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) for 18 years.

A western diplomat close to the IAEA said he was unable to provide details on how much uranium would be fed into the plant.

A report issued by IAEA chief on Sept. 2 said Iran had produced 6.8 tonnes of uranium hexafluoride at Isfahan by the end of August, which nuclear experts said could theoretically be processed into fuel for a single bomb.—Reuters

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