Iran’s Khamenei rules out interviews with nuclear scientists
Wed May 20, 2015 8:26pm BST
By Parisa Hafezi
Wed May 20, 2015 8:26pm BST
By Parisa Hafezi
ANKARA
(Reuters) – Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said on
Wednesday Tehran would not accept “unreasonable demands” by world powers
over its disputed nuclear programme and ruled out letting inspectors interview its atomic scientists.
The
comments, broadcast live on state TV, were the latest in a series of
forthright statements on inspections in the countdown to a June 30
deadline to resolve a decade-old standoff over Iran’s nuclear work.
“We will never yield to pressure … We will not accept unreasonable demands … Iran will not give access to its (nuclear) scientists,” Khamenei said.
“We will not allow the privacy of our nuclear scientists or any other important issue to be violated.”
Khamenei,
who has the final say for Iran on any deal, last month ruled out any
“extraordinary supervision measures” over nuclear activities and said military sites could not be inspected.
The
U.N. International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) has been trying to
investigate Western allegations that Iran has worked on designing a
nuclear warhead. Iran says its nuclear programme is peaceful and that it
is working with the IAEA to clear up any suspicions.
U.N.
inspectors regularly monitor Iran’s declared nuclear facilities, but
the IAEA has complained for years of a lack of access to sites,
equipment, documents and people relevant to its probe.
Western
officials say Iran must step up cooperation with the IAEA if it wants
to reach a broader diplomatic deal with world powers that would
gradually end crippling financial and other sanctions on the oil
producer.
“They say we should let them interview our nuclear scientists. This means interrogation,” Khamenei said.
“I
will not let foreigners talk to our scientists and to interrogate our
dear children … who brought us this extensive (nuclear) knowledge.”
Iran
reached a tentative deal with the powers on April 2 to allow U.N.
inspectors to carry out more intrusive, short-notice inspections under
an “Additional Protocol” to the Non-Proliferation Treaty. But there have
been sharply differing interpretations from both sides on the details
of that access.
When
asked whether there had been some progress since April, French Foreign
Minister Laurent Fabius, who has been perceived as the most demanding in
the talks, said the negotiations now had to discuss the deal’s annexes,
which was not the case yet.
He
said Iran also had to offer real transparency in its military
activities as part of the deal, including rapid access to IAEA
inspectors to all sites.
“What
happens if Iran doesn’t comply. How much time will we have to check? In
the current text, it’s 24 days, but in 24 days a lot of things can
disappear,” Fabius said.
Negotiators
from Iran and the powers met in Vienna on Wednesday to try to iron out
remaining differences, including the timing of sanctions relief and the
future of Iran’s atomic research and development programme.
“There
has to be concrete commitments on the enrichment activities allowed for
length of the accord, including a phased reduction in the number of
centrifuges at the underground site of Fordow and an efficient mechanism
to restore sanctions if Iran does not respect its commitments,” Fabius
said.
Talks
between EU political director Helga Schmid and Iranian negotiators
Abbas Araqchi and Majid Takht-Ravanchi will run until Friday, with
technical experts meeting in parallel, the EU said in a statement.
(Writing by Parisa Hafezi; Additional reporting by Adrian Croft in Brussels; Editing by Andrew Heavens and Tom Heneghan)
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