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UN Resolution 1737

Japan to freeze assets tied to Iran nuclear program PDF Print E-mail
Tuesday, 22 April 2008

By Takashi Hirokawa and Toko Sekiguchi

ImageApril 22 (Bloomberg) -- Japan will freeze assets belonging to 12 organizations and 13 people that are tied to Iran's nuclear development, the government's top spokesman said.

The action is based on a United Nations Security Council resolution, Chief Cabinet Secretary Nobutaka Machimura told reporters in Tokyo.

Japan will freeze assets of individuals including Mohammad Reza Naqdi, a former deputy chief in the Iranian army, according to a Japanese Foreign Ministry statement. Before today Japan had frozen the assets of 23 organizations and 27 individuals since May 2007 as part of United Nations sanctions against Iran.

Iran's Islamic government has repeatedly denied that it is seeking nuclear weapons and says its program is aimed at generating electrical power. The nation has refused United Nations demands to halt its plans to enrich uranium, a potential step toward weapons production.

Iran is "hell-bent" on acquiring nuclear weapons and as a result "the military option must be kept on the table," U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates said yesterday during a speech to the Corps of Cadets at the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, New York.





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In Focus
Iran's nuclear standoff
  • Reuters: An Iranian overture to defuse a standoff with world powers over its uranium enrichment programme will not be addressed unless Tehran suspends sensitive nuclear activity first, Western diplomats are signaling.

  • AFP: Six world powers have completed the details of a "refreshed" offer they will present to Iran in an effort to persuade it to halt its controversial nuclear activities, a US official said Friday.

  • Iran Focus: Tehran, Iran, May 15 - Iran’s Foreign Ministry has warned the United States to recognise Tehran's nuclear ambitions and not to create an “unwise political atmosphere”, state media reported on Wednesday.

  • AP: Iran's new offer for international talks touches on a broad range of topics, but fails to address U.N. Security Council calls for Tehran to give up uranium enrichment, according to a copy of the offer obtained Thursday by The Associated Press.

  • Reuters: U.S. President George W. Bush will tell Israel's parliament on Thursday that letting Iran acquire nuclear weapons would be an "unforgivable betrayal of future generations".

  • Reuters: Iran said on Thursday the latest round of talks with U.N. inspectors to resolve remaining issues over its disputed nuclear work were "positive and constructive", a news agency reported.

  • Reuters: Iran's proposal for negotiations with world powers urges cooperation to stabilise the Middle East but makes clear Tehran would not give up nuclear activity as they demand, according to the text obtained by Reuters.

  • Reuters: The United States said on Wednesday six world powers had no plans to offer Iran security guarantees to encourage it to suspend nuclear activity, hours after Russia floated the idea.

  • Reuters: The six nations negotiating with Iran to suspend its uranium enrichment programme could guarantee Tehran's security, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov told reporters on Wednesday.

  • AFP: Iran's ambassador to the European Union presented Tuesday a new package of proposals aimed at solving the world's "collective challenges", including nuclear energy, a statement said.

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