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"Israel
… has been announced as having hundreds of nuclear warheads and
is a serious threat to international peace and security,"
says Khatami
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ISLAMABAD,
December 24 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - Atomic or nuclear
weapons are not going to bring security for any nation in the world,
Iranian President Mohammad Khatami said Tuesday, December 24, adding
that "some countries who may have exerted pressure on Pakistan to
abandon the nuclear program" should press Israel as well.
"We
believe that atomic or nuclear weapons are not going to bring security
for any nation in the world. And some countries may have exerted
pressure, for example, on Pakistan to abandon the nuclear program
inside their country," Khatami said, quoted by Agence
France-Presse (AFP).
"But
we believe that these countries should press the Zionist regime of
Israel that has been announced as having hundreds of nuclear warheads
and is a serious threat to international peace and security."
He
added that Iran is determined to complete the Bushehr plant to be used
to produce energy and for peaceful purposes.
"We
are determined to develop it [the plant] for energy and peaceful
purposes in the country. I repeat, peaceful purpose," he said.
Concerning
the nuclear waste Russia demanded to be returned, Khtami said that
Iran would return to Russia nuclear waste.
"We
have no problem to send back the nuclear waste or the uranium waste
back to the other countries...," Khatami told reporters in
translated remarks on the second day of his first official visit to
Pakistan. "We are not insisting to treat them inside Iran because
they would also have environmental problems," the president said.
The
first reactor at the plant in Bushehr, in southern Iran, is scheduled
to be loaded with fuel by the end of 2003 and come on stream by
mid-2004.
Meanwhile,
Khatami urged further cooperation between the Muslim neighbors to
quash years of strain and suspicion over Afghanistan.
Khatami,
the first Iranian president to visit Islamabad in 10 years, was to
meet Prime Minister Zafarullah Jamali in the morning to address a full
slate of bilateral and regional issues including common neighbor
Afghanistan, over which they have had major differences.
"In
our neighborhood, nevertheless, there have existed various issues and
problems that have left harmful impacts on both of us," Khatami
said late Monday, December 23, at a state banquet hosted by his
counterpart Pervez Musharraf, with whom he met earlier.
The
two sides were "resolved to solve all issues and difficulties
that linger in our mutual relations," he added.
"To
solve these problems, we are in need of further cooperation."
Tehran
and Islamabad hope to kick off a new era in ties between the Islamic
states following the collapse of Afghanistan's Taliban regime.
"Security
and stability for Afghanistan is very important for Iran and Pakistan
and we are going to help the country move in that direction,"
Khatami said late Monday.
Tehran-Islamabad
ties reached an all-time low during Taliban's rule, with Iran and
Pakistan fighting a proxy war on Afghan soil as Islamabad backed
Taliban and Tehran supported its opponents in the Northern Alliance.
The
two countries are now technically on the same side in Afghanistan,
officially supporting the government of President Hamid Karzai.
They
are also keenly aware of the importance of stability in the
war-ravaged central Asian nation, Iran's envoy to Pakistan Seyed
Serajeddin Mousavi added.
"If
there are problems there, both Iran and Pakistan will have to face the
onslaught of refugees," he said.
Khatami
was to focus on bilateral economic concerns in his talks with Jamali,
Pakistan's first civilian premier since Musharraf's 1999 bloodless
coup.
They
were to sign agreements on trade, agriculture, and science and
technology.