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Iran rejects UN resolution
24/12/2006 09:27  - (SA)  

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  • Nuclear sanctions on Iran
  • Nuclear sanctions on Iran
  • You can't stop our nukes - Iran
  • You can't stop our nukes - Iran
  • United Nations - Iran has denounced UN sanctions imposed on its nuclear programme, and has accused the Security Council of double standards for ignoring Israel's recent admission of its nuclear capabilities.

    Speaking after the unanimous adoption of a Security Council resolution aimed at pressuring Tehran to suspend its uranium enrichment programme, Iran's UN ambassador on Saturday called the sanctions illegal and accused Europe and the United States of trying to prevent Iran from pursuing peaceful nuclear technology.

    "A nation is being punished for exercising its inalienable rights," Javad Zarif said in a speech after the vote, accusing the council of acting at the "behest of a dangerous regime with aggression and war crimes as its signature brand of behaviour," referring to Israel.

    Earlier this month, Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert appeared to abandon Israel's longstanding policy of ambiguity on nuclear weapons when he listed Israel among countries that possess them. His office maintains his comments were misinterpreted.

    The Iranian Foreign Ministry was equally strong in its reaction to the council vote, declaring that the government will defy the resolution and continue enriching uranium.

    "Iran considers the new UN Security Council resolution ... an extralegal act outside the frame of its responsibilities and against the UN Charter," the statement said. "The Iranian nation, relying on its national capabilities and within the framework of its rights stipulated in the Nuclear Non-proliferation Treaty, will continue its peaceful nuclear activities."

    Iran's plans continue

    Zarif's speech was filled with lists of grievances: allegations of war crimes and nuclear irresponsibility by Israel, Iranian proposals he claims were ignored by the Europeans and Americans, and crimes against Iran he charged were ignored by the Security Council.

    Zarif also questioned the sincerity of the Security Council's claim that it wanted Iran to suspend enrichment in order to build confidence and trust between Iran and the international community.

    The United States' "stated objective has always been to use the council as an instrument of pressure and intimidation to compel Iran to abandon its rights," Zarif said. "Knowing their bright recent history, we can all assume what the unstated objective is."

    Iran has said it intends to move toward large-scale uranium enrichment involving 3 000 centrifuges by late 2006, and then expand the program to 54 000 centrifuges, which spin uranium gas into enriched material to produce nuclear fuel.

    Iranian nuclear officials say 54 000 centrifuges would produce enough enriched uranium to fuel a 1 000-megawatt reactor, such as the one Iran has built with Russian assistance at Bushehr, southern Iran. The reactor is due to begin operating next year.

    - AP



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