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UN Resolution 1737

UN’s Amano says Iran ‘under obligation’ to suspend nuclear work PDF Print E-mail
Friday, 03 July 2009

By Jonathan Tirone

ImageJuly 3 (Bloomberg) -- Japan’s Yukiya Amano, director- general designate of the United Nations atomic agency, appealed to Iran to follow Security Council demands to suspend its nuclear work.

“Iran and other countries are under obligation to implement these Security Council resolutions,” said Amano today in Vienna, at his first news conference since winning a vote to lead the International Atomic Energy Agency. “I hope the implementation by Iran and other countries will further help the agency to discharge its responsibilities.”

The Security Council has implemented three sets of sanctions against Iran for refusing to suspend uranium enrichment and the construction of a heavy-water nuclear reactor. The U.S. and its allies say the government in Tehran wants to build an atomic weapon. Iran says it’s developing peaceful nuclear technology to generate electricity.

Amano, 62, a longtime proponent of nuclear disarmament, won an IAEA election yesterday to become the new director general, succeeding Nobel Peace Prize laureate Mohamed ElBaradei, who retires in November.

The Japanese diplomat, who previously failed to win majority support in three meetings of the IAEA board, said he would seek to build alliances with developing and industrialized countries before the agency’s annual general conference in September. The IAEA’s 144 members must approve his election.

Amano, a lawyer who graduated from Tokyo University, joined Japan’s Foreign Ministry in 1972. He has negotiated nuclear safeguards agreements and atomic bomb test-ban treaties.





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In Focus
Iran's nuclear standoff
  • AP: The United States is developing a "significant regime of sanctions" after Iran apparently spurned an offer to negotiate over its suspect nuclear program, President Barack Obama said Tuesday.

  • AFP: Defence Secretary Robert Gates is hoping for a new UN resolution on sanctions against Iran in "a matter of weeks", as world powers raise the heat on Tehran over its nuclear programme, a US defence spokesman said on Tuesday.

  • Reuters: Malaysia has fired its ambassador to the U.N. nuclear watchdog for voting against a resolution rebuking Iran and he will be replaced as rotating head of the agency's governing body later this week, officials said.

  • Reuters: Western concerns about Iran's nuclear intentions are well-founded, Russia's national security chief said on Tuesday, and suggested that more than diplomacy might be needed to end Tehran's defiance.

  • Reuters: Iran began work on Tuesday to make higher-grade nuclear fuel, a senior official said, and the Pentagon said the United States wanted a U.N. Security Council resolution on Iran "within weeks" over its nuclear programme.

  • Washington Post: Iran's formal notification Monday to a United Nations nuclear watchdog that it will begin producing higher-grade enriched uranium marks a new and potentially dangerous turn in Tehran's confrontation with the West over its nuclear ambitions.

  • AFP: French President Nicolas Sarkozy and US Defence Secretary Robert Gates agreed in talks Monday that "strong" new sanctions must be passed against Iran over its nuclear drive, the French presidency said.

  • Reuters: International pressure for new sanctions against Iran grew on Monday after Tehran announced more moves to expand nuclear fuel production and enrichment plants, heightening Western fears it wants to make atom bombs.

  • AFP: Britain voiced deep concern Monday over Iran's "contradictory rhetoric" after Tehran confirmed plans to produce higher enriched uranium, days after seeming to accept a UN-drafted nuclear deal.

  • Reuters: Iran has rejected Western overtures and the international community has no choice but to move toward imposing new sanctions over its nuclear program, U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates said on Monday.

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