ABU
DHABI, December 16 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) – U.N. arms
inspectors are making good progress in Iraq and have so far found no
evidence of nuclear or chemical weapons production there, according to
International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) head Mohamed El-Baradei.
Meanwhile,
several teams of U.N. weapons experts set off Monday, December 16, to
search for alleged weapons of mass destruction.
El-Baradei
warned, however, that Iraq must continue to cooperate to avert war,
Agence France-Presse (AFP) reported.
"Now
we are making good progress in having Iraq cooperate," El-Baradei
said during a lecture in Abu Dhabi late Sunday, December 15.
"I
think Iraq can avert conflict by maintaining this cooperation and
providing us with authentic and sufficient information about its
military capabilities," he said at the Emirates Center for
Strategic Studies and Research.
With
the implementation of the United Nations new disarmament Resolution
1441, "the use of force no longer appears as the first option but
is now regarded as the last resort.
"This
a very positive development," the IAEA director-general said.
He
stressed that the IAEA had so far found no evidence to support
allegations that Iraq is producing nuclear or chemical weapons.
However
he warned: "Iraq has two options, either to fully cooperate with
the inspectors to avoid war and have sanctions lifted or not to
cooperate and face the consequences."
Iraq
submitted a 12,000-page weapons program report to the U.N. Security
Council a week ago, answering a U.N. requirement after weapons
inspections resumed in November 2002.
More
than 100 disarmament monitors are working in Iraq to verify Baghdad's
report amid U.S. and British claims that the document is far from
complete.
Asked
abut U.S. threats to attack Iraq, EL-Baradei said: "We were
assured by the U.S. that it will continue to support the inspection
process.
"If
it succeeds, it will lead to the aversion of war... I do hope Iraq
will realize the U.N. is serious and that a conflict will be
averted."
Meanwhile,
several teams of U.N. weapons experts set off Monday, December 16, to
search for alleged suspected weapons of mass destruction after
receiving fresh supplies of staff and materiel, an AFP correspondent
reported.
At
least five teams from the U.N. Monitoring, Verification and Inspection
Commission (UNMOVIC) and IAEA left their headquarters in Baghdad's
Canal Hotel.
One
group headed to a chemical plant in the vast industrial complex of
Taji, 18 kilometers (11 miles) north of Baghdad.
The
plant belongs to the Zat al-Sawari company, affiliated to the Ministry
of Industry and minerals. The nine-member U.N. team was expected to
verify that it does not produce chemical agents which could be
weaponized.
Another
15 more inspectors flew in Sunday, raising the total to 105 – 86
from UNMOVIC and 19 from the IAEA, said U.N. spokesman Hiro Ueki.