
This article was last updated on April 16, 2022
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The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) said that there was no progress in the UN nuclear regulators and Iran’s talk which was scheduled to take place in Moscow later this month, aimed at resuming the IAEA’s inquiry on suspected atom bomb by the Islamic state, and it was said that the outcomes were disappointing.
The chief inspector of IAEA Herman Nackaerts said no movement was made and there was no point to conclude this round of talks, referring to his meeting with Iran’s ambassador to the IAEA Ali Asghar Soltanieh. He said Iran was going back on previous vows it had made to the inspectors and for another meeting the follow-up date had not been set.
Soltanieh called for time and patience on Friday saying that Iran was “ready to remove all ambiguities and prove to the world that our activities are exclusively for peaceful purposes.”
He added “Iran is not providing the necessary cooperation to enable the agency to provide credible assurance about the absence of undeclared nuclear material and activities in Iran, and therefore to conclude that all nuclear material in Iran is in peaceful activities.”
Soltanieh also said, “Whoever raises the issue of Parchin or other sites which is going to be dealt with in this framework, is just creating a negative environment, and this is not advisable and this is not conducive,” he told journalists.
Isreal and Western powers believed that Iran was attempting to produce nuclear bomb but Tehran claimed that it was hardly developing any atomic power for the civilian purposes.
The IAEA had been pushing Tehran for a treaty that would grant IAEA’s officers a direct access to the Parchin military complex because it suspected Iran might clean the site of any incriminating evidence.
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