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"From
today, we are temporarily suspending our process of uranium
enrichment," Rowhani
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MOSCOW,
November 10 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) – Iran said Monday,
November 10, that it is suspending uranium enrichment temporarily, and
is handing a letter to the U.N. nuclear watchdog agreeing to sign the
so-called Additional Protocol.
"From
today, we are temporarily suspending our process of uranium
enrichment," said Hassan Rowhani, secretary of Iran's Supreme
National Security Council, in Moscow.
"Before
your government, I officially announce we are giving to the
International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) a letter officially agreeing
to the additional protocol," Rowhani was quoted by Agence
France-Presse (AFP) as saying to Russian President Vladimir Putin.
Signing
the additional protocol to the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) would
subject Tehran to a vigorous inspections regime, including surprise
visits to suspect facilities.
And
the suspension of uranium enrichment, a process to create material that
can be used to make atomic bombs, is one of a number of demands set by
the IAEA for Iran to allay fears about its nuclear activities.
Rowhani
added that the IAEA has informed officials in Iran that they "had
no further questions that Iran had not already answered".
'No
Obstacles'
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"We
note with pleasure that Iran has itself resolved to limit
itself," Putin
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For
his part, Putin replied that Moscow believed Iran had the right to
enrich uranium, but was happy that Tehran had "itself resolved to
limit itself".
"With
regard to the enrichment of uranium, Iran has a right to carry out these
kinds of activities but we note with pleasure that Iran has itself
resolved to limit itself," Putin said.
The
Russian leader said Moscow no longer sees any obstacles to continuing
cooperation with the Islamic state, where it is building its first
nuclear reactor at the southwestern town of Bushehr.
He
added that, in light of the announcement, Moscow no longer saw any
obstacle to continuing nuclear co-operation with Tehran.
"Because
of this, I see no obstacles to cooperating in the nuclear sphere with
Tehran," Interfax quoted Putin as saying.
The
Iranian official confirmed the agreement, saying the Russian government
promises to finish in the near future the construction of the Bushehr
power plant.
Rowani
said that the two sides would also launch talks on the possibility of
Russia helping construct a second nuclear reactor at Bushehr in southern
Iran.
Russia
has delayed Bushehr's launch repeatedly in a nod to concerns from Israel
and the United States over the project.
The
plant is now not expected to go onstream until spring 2005 at the
earliest.
Moscow
and Tehran appeared Monday to make little progress on the signature of a
separate protocol that would guarantee that Iran returns all of the
spent fuel from the Bushehr plant - material the West fears could be
reprocessed into making nuclear weapons.
The
Russian atomic energy ministry said the protocol was being discussed
during Rowhani's visit but refused to specify when an agreement might be
signed.
Tehran
first promised to suspend the uranium enrichment process last month
during talks with EU members Britain, France and Germany.
But
it emerged shortly afterwards that the process was continuing as
officials were "studying how to halt the nuclear fuel cycle",
according to a Foreign Ministry statement.
A
western diplomat quoted by Reuters says the U.S. has little chance of
realizing its goal of having Iran declared by the IAEA board to be in
non-compliance with the NPT.
Such
a declaration would require reporting Iran to the U.N. Security Council,
which has the right to impose sanctions, the same step taken against
neighboring Iraq years before the U.S.-British invasion.
Observers
had earlier expressed fears that Washington might use the nuclear
allegations to make the case for launching a military aggression against
Iran and deviate attention from the Iraq quagmire by turning heat on its
neighbor.