Diplomats: Iran censured at IAEA meeting
VIENNA — The majority of the board of the International Atomic Energy Agency has voted to censure Iran for its nuclear defiance.
Diplomats inside the meeting said Friday that 25 of the 34 IAEA board nations present voted for a resolution backed by the U.S., Russia, China, Britain, France and Germany.
The resolution criticizes Iran for defying a U.N. Security Council ban on uranium enrichment — the source of both nuclear fuel and the fissile core of warheads.
It also censures it for secretly building a uranium enrichment facility, and demands that it immediately suspend construction.
It notes that the IAEA cannot confirm that Tehran’s nuclear program is exclusively geared toward peaceful uses, and expresses “serious concern” that Iran may be hiding a military nuclear program.
Iran insists its nuclear activities are peaceful. But there are fears it could turn them to making nuclear arms.
The diplomats spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the situation.
Related News
Iran issue unsolved at ElBaradei's last IAEA board meetingNovember 26th, 2009 VIENNA - The dispute over Iran's nuclear programme showed no sign of abating as diplomats gathered at the International Atomic Energy Agency Thursday for a meeting that would be the last under IAEA chief Mohamed ElBaradei. The IAEA's board of governors was set to vote on a resolution drafted by six world powers that would express "serious concern" about a new nuclear site that Tehran revealed belatedly in September and note that Iran had broken international rules by building it.
Pressure mounts on Iran at ElBaradei's final IAEA board meetingNovember 26th, 2009 VIENNA - International pressure mounted on Iran Thursday at a meeting of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) in Vienna at which six world powers sought a vote on a resolution censuring Tehran for secretly building a new nuclear site. As the 12-year tenure of IAEA chief Mohamed ElBaradei comes to a close Monday, the dispute over Iran's nuclear programme showed no sign of abating and the country continued to refuse uncovering the truth about alleged nuclear weapons projects.
Diplomats say big powers prepare resolution critical of Iran nuke program for IAEA meetingNovember 24th, 2009 Diplomats: big powers prepare Iran IAEA resolutionVIENNA — Diplomats say six world powers have prepared a resolution critical of Iran's nuclear program for the next board meeting of the International Atomic Energy Agency. They say the draft calls on Iran to be more open about its program following its recent revelation that it had nearly completed a new uranium enrichment facility in secret.
Iran threatens IAEA ahead of inspection of new siteNovember 18th, 2009 VIENNA - An Iranian diplomat threatened Wednesday to withhold cooperation with the International Atomic Energy Agency's probe of a new nuclear site if the IAEA pushes too hard for information, participants at an agency meeting in Vienna said. Iran's Ambassador Ali Asghar Soltanieh reacted angrily to the watchdog's questions about the origin and purpose of the Fordu enrichment plant, the sources said, one day before the IAEA's second inspection of this site which Iran revealed in September.
New Iran site raises question about other secret locations: IAEANovember 16th, 2009 VIENNA - Iran's late declaration of a new nuclear site raises the question whether there are other still secret facilities, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) said Monday in its latest report on the Islamic state. Iran informed the Vienna-based IAEA in September that it has been constructing an additional uranium enrichment plant in Fordu, 20 km north of the city of Qom.