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Iran to press for recognition of 'nuclear rights' in talks

by Staff Writers
Tehran (AFP) Sept 28, 2010
Iran will press to have its "nuclear rights" recognised in talks with world powers who accuse Tehran of seeking atomic weapons, a foreign ministry spokesman told reporters on Tuesday.

"Iran has announced its view points and readiness for talks with the P5+1. We are seeking to have Iran's nuclear rights recognised in these talks," Ramin Mehmanparast said at his weekly press briefing.

He said Iran's chief nuclear negotiator Saeed Jalili was seeking to set "a date and venue" to meet EU foreign affairs chief Catherine Ashton, who represents permanent UN Security Council members and Germany -- known as the P5+1.

President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad last week said an Iranian official may meet with Ashton in October "for preparatory work" in a new bid to open negotiations on Iran's contested nuclear drive.

"If Ms Ashton contacts the Iranian representative she can set a time for talks," the Iranian leader told a press conference in New York.

He also said that "in October the representative of Iran will meet with one member of the P5+1 to decide the framework of talks."

The six world powers - the United States, Britain, China, France, Germany and Russia - are leading the talks aimed at persuading Tehran to rein in its suspect nuclear programme.

But Ahmadinejad told the New York press conference that any talks with the Western powers, who accuse Iran of seeking a nuclear bomb, must be carried out on the principle of "justice and respect."

The Iranian leader had also said that some members of the world powers had had contacts with Iranian Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly held last week.

He gave no details apart from saying there had been no contacts with the US government in New York.

In June, the UN Security Council imposed a fourth round of sanctions against the Islamic republic, which in turn said it would suspend talks until September.

In a statement last Wednesday the United States and the other five powers said they are seeking an "early negotiated solution" to the standoff.

Iran's uranium enrichment work is at the centre of international concerns as the process can be used to make nuclear fuel as well as the core of an atom bomb.

Iran denies seeking nuclear weapons and has pressed on with enrichment, insisting it has a right to the process as a signatory of the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.

earlier related report
US Senators urge sanctions on Chinese firms in Iran
Washington (AFP) Sept 28, 2010 - The United States should punish Chinese and Turkish firms reportedly providing Iran with refined petroleum products, two senior US senators urged Secretary of State Hillary Clinton on Tuesday.

Democratic Senator Chuck Schumer and Republican Senator Jon Kyl, his party's number-two leader in the chamber, called on Clinton in a letter to "promptly" enforce a US law aimed at denying Iran access to world gasoline markets.

The United States should "penalize those companies that are continuing to supply Iran with refined petroleum products" since President Barack Obama signed the law in July, they wrote.

"According to press reports, these would include Turkey's Turpas, and China's Sinopec, National Petroleum Corporation (CNPC), and Zhuhai Zhenrong," said Kyl and Schumer, whose offices made the letter public.

US lawmakers have bitterly complained that Chinese firms have taken the place of European rivals leaving the Iranian market, undermining international sanctions aimed at halting Tehran's suspect nuclear program.

Washington should also tighten the financial noose on Iran by imposing sanctions on its central bank and taking steps "to ensure Iranian banks are not able to participate in the international banking system," they said.

The Obama administration should also move to deny US government contracts to firms that exports communications jamming or monitoring technology to Iran, they said.

The senators also pressed Clinton to act on the sanctions irrespective of Iran's stated willingess to return to talks with world powers who accuse the Islamic republic of a secret campaign to develop a nuclear weapon.

The lawmakers said Iran aimed to use such outreach as it has in the past to gain "a reprieve from sanctions," only to stymie Washington and its partners later.

"We must urge our allies to resist any false entreaty to negotiate from Iran. You will have the full support of the Congress in doing all that's necessary to prevent a nuclear armed Iranm," they said.

"The window to stop the Iranian regime from obtaining a nuclear weapons capability through sanctions is rapidly closing," they warned.

Tehran denies it seeks nuclear weapons and that its atomic energy program is for purely civilian purposes.



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