| October 31, 2009 Iran lawmakers reject UN-drafted uranium plan
|
TEHRAN, Iran (AP) - Senior Iranian lawmakers rejected on
Saturday a U.N.-backed plan to ship much of the country's uranium
abroad for further enrichment, raising further doubts about the
likelihood Tehran will finally approve the deal.
The UN-brokered plan requires Iran to send 1.2 tons (1,100
kilograms) of low-enriched uranium - around 70 percent of its
stockpile - to Russia in one batch by the end of the year, easing
concerns the material would be used for a bomb.
After further enrichment in Russia, France would convert the
uranium into fuel rods that would be returned to Iran for use in a
reactor in Tehran that produces medical isotopes.
Iran has indicated that it may agree to send only "part" of
its stockpile in several shipments. Should the talks fail to help
Iran obtain the fuel from abroad, Iran has threatened to enrich
uranium to the higher level needed to power the research reactor
itself domestically.
The Tehran reactor needs uranium enriched to about 20 percent,
higher than the 3.5 percent-enriched uranium Iran is producing for
a nuclear power plant it plans to build in southwestern Iran.
Enriching uranium to even higher levels can produce weapons-grade
materials.
"We are totally opposed to the proposal to send 3.5 percent
enriched uranium in return for 20 percent enriched fuel," senior
lawmaker Alaeddin Boroujerdi was quoted by the semiofficial ISNA
news agency as saying.
Boroujerdi, who heads the parliament's National Security
Committee,
said the priority for Iran was to buy nuclear fuel and
hold on to its own uranium. He also said there was no guarantee
that Russia or France will keep to the deal and supply nuclear fuel
to Iran if Tehran ships them its enriched uranium.
"The preferred option is to buy fuel ... there is no guarantee
that they will give us fuel ... in return for enriched uranium. We
can't trust the West," ISNA quoted Boroujerdi as saying.
Kazem Jalali, another senior lawmaker, said Iran wants nuclear
fuel first before agreeing to ship its enriched uranium stocks to
Russia and France even if it decides to strike a deal.
"They need to deliver nuclear fuel to Iran first ... the West
is not trustworthy," the official IRNA news agency quoted him as
saying.
Jalali said Iran needs fuel and putting conditions to deliver it
for the research reactor is unacceptable.
"Countries possessing fuel are required, under international
rules, to provide fuel for such reactors. Putting conditions is
basically wrong," he said.
Jalali said these conditions for the fuel was teaching Iran new
lessons.
"Western approach toward Iran's demand for fuel is only
straightening Iran's resolve to continue its peaceful nuclear
program," he added.
The lawmaker said France has reneged on previous agreements and
that Tehran doesn't trust Paris.
He said Iran holds a 10 percent share in a Eurodif nuclear plant
in France purchased more then three decades earlier but is not
allowed to get a gram of the uranium it produces as an example that
Iran can't trust the West.
Tehran says it has paid for 50 tons of UF-6 gas, which can be
turned into enriched uranium, in Eurodif's plant but has not been
allowed to use it.
"Iran is a shareholder in Eurodif but doesn't enjoy its rights.
This shows the French are not reliable," Jalali said.
Areva, the state-run French nuclear company, has described Iran
as a "sleeping partner" in Eurodif.
The U.S. and its allies have been pushing the U.N.-backed
agreement as a way to ease their concerns that Iran is using its
nuclear program as a way to covertly develop weapons capability.
(Copyright 2009 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
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