Iran
was under increased diplomatic pressure on Friday after an International Atomic
Energy Agency report said it was expanding its controversial nuclear programme
and had "hampered" the UN watchdog's work.
The
report added to criticism of Iran's nuclear stand by UN chief Ban Ki-moon at a
two-day Non-Aligned Movement summit in Tehran that was to wrap up on Friday.
Iran's
supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei opened the summit with a speech railing
against the United States, the "Zionist wolves" of Israel and the
"dictatorship" of the UN Security Council, which are at the forefront
of the pressure directed at his country.
He
said Iran would "never" cease its nuclear energy activities,
regardless of UN and Western sanctions, and insisted that the programme was not
aimed at developing nuclear weapons, whose use he called an "unforgiveable
sin."
The
International Atomic Energy Agency report released late on Thursday -- in the
middle of the Tehran summit -- said Iran had doubled its capacity to enrich
uranium at its underground Fordo nuclear facility by installing, but not yet
switching on, more than 1,000 more centrifuges.
It
also said that UN inspectors wanting to see part of a military base in Parchin,
outside Tehran, which is suspected of hosting tests of explosives that could be
used in a nuclear warhead, had been "significantly hampered" by
months of refused access, what looked like intensive scrubbing and scraping at
the site, and the use of covers to shield the site from satellite cameras.
A
member of Iran's parliamentary national security and foreign policy commission,
Hossein Naqavi Hosseini, was quoted by the ISNA news agency as saying that the
timing of the report's release was "politically motivated" with the
aim of "undermining the summit."
"This
report does not raise any points or content but merely repeats the agency's
previous claims," he said.
Iran's
uranium enrichment, and its Fordo bunker, were two of the key points raised in
negotiations this year by the P5+1 -- the UN Security Council's five permanent
members plus Germany -- that have all but stalled.
EU
foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton, representing the P5+1, is to talk with
Iran's chief nuclear negotiator Saeed Jalili "in the coming days," Ashton's
spokesman said on Thursday.
Iranian
officials have dismissed the UN concerns over their nuclear activities, saying
that Parchin was an off-limits military base, that the focus on it was
overblown and that suspicions about its atomic programme were based on
"false" Western intelligence.
Ban,
on his first visit to Iran as UN secretary general, this week told Khamenei and
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad their country needed to take concrete steps to
allay international concerns, notably by complying with the IAEA and with UN
resolutions.
He
warned about bellicose rhetoric from Israel and Iran that has been rising in
recent weeks, saying "a war of words can quickly spiral into a war of
violence."
In
a speech at an Iranian diplomats' college on Thursday, he also warned about the
"cost of Iran's current trajectory," saying that "any country at
odds with the international community... finds itself isolated from the thrust
of common progress."
While
the top leaders of Israel -- which is widely believed to possess the Middle
East's sole nuclear arsenal -- have given the impression they are poised to
launch imminent strikes on Iran, the United States is emphasising diplomacy.
"The
window of opportunity to resolve this remains open... but it will not remain
open indefinitely," White House spokesman Jay Carney said on Thursday.
The
worsening showdown added to other issues overshadowing the NAM summit in
Tehran.
A
key one has been the hosts' steadfast support for Syrian President Bashar
al-Assad in his regime's deadly 18-month conflict with insurgents.
On
Thursday, Egypt's new President Mohamed Morsi -- making the first trip to Iran
by an Egyptian head of state since the 1979 Islamic revolution -- used the
summit to openly voice his support for the Syrian opposition.
The
"oppressive" Syrian regime had lost all legitimacy and was confronted
with the same pro-democracy rebellions that had swept the Arab world, including
Egypt, since 2010, he said, as Ahmadinejad listened stone-faced.
Source: MSN.com
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