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Iran raises stakes on nuclear
plans
Tehran -
Iran last night invited private firms to join its nuclear programme,
further escalating tensions with the West.
The country's hardline president,
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, told the United Nations general assembly in New
York that Tehran held the 'inalienable right' to develop a nuclear
capability fuel cycle. His invitation to companies to share its
nuclear secrets will prove antagonistic to the U.S., which earlier
yesterday had issued a warning that Iran's atomic ambitions threatened
world peace.
Ahmadinejad,
who was elected in June, claimed that the involvement of the private
sector in its nuclear enrichment programme would prove that Tehran is
not producing nuclear weapons.
Hours earlier, U.S. secretary of
state Condoleezza Rice had warned Iran to abandon 'forever' its
nuclear weapons ambitions. But Ahmadinejad rejected accusations that
the regime was seeking to build nuclear weapons, claiming that its
'religious principles' prevent it from so doing.
He also called for a UN committee to
be set up to investigate which countries had given Israel the
technology to develop nuclear weapons.
Last night's speech in New York by
Ahmadinejad follows U.S.-led attempts to gather support for Iran to be
referred to the UN security council and face possible sanctions if it
did not halt is nuclear ambitions. Tomorrow, the International Atomic
Energy Agency will vote on the action it will take over Iran.
The debate over nuclear weapons took
a further twist last week when senior diplomats told The Observer that
the failure of last week's UN summit to deliver an agreement on the
non-proliferation of nuclear weapons was jeopardised by the U.S..
Officials involved in the
negotiations have confirmed that the Bush administration's refusal to
countenance any form of disarmament blocked efforts to push measures
that would prevent regimes seeking to develop a nuclear capability.
The news contradicts some reports that the U.S. had been furious that
plans to crack down on nuclear proliferation were stripped out of the
final UN document.
Iran last month spurned a European
package of economic, security and technology incentives for it to
abandon sensitive nuclear work and reactivated a factory converting
uranium ore into gas. --
Guardian News
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