Iran minister warns EU on nuke activities (Agencies) Updated: 2005-02-16 13:43
Iran's foreign minister on Tuesday warned Britain, France and Germany that
they must make more economic and technological concessions to meet a deadline
next month for agreement on Tehran's nuclear activities.
The three European Union powers are trying to persuade Iran to abandon its
uranium enrichment program, which Washington fears could be used to manufacture
nuclear weapons. Iran insisted again Tuesday that its nuclear activities are
peaceful.
But the talks still need much progress to reach a fruitful conclusion,
Iranian Foreign Minister Kamel Kharrazi said after discussions with the
Luxembourg government, which holds the EU presidency.
"It needs more efforts, more seriousness, more confidence building to be
evaluated as a fruitful and positive process," he added. "So we have to try
harder and be more serious."
Kharrazi called for the 25-nation bloc to be more open on economic and
political issues.
Iran suspended its uranium enrichment program last year under a deal struck
with France, Britain and Germany and it plans to decide soon whether to continue
the suspension, which is monitored by U.N. nuclear inspectors.
Iran's top nuclear negotiator Hasan Rowhani said earlier this month that his
nation would not be obliged to continue talks if no progress is made by March
20, which would mark the end of the Iranian calendar year.
In exchange for nuclear guarantees, the Europeans are offering Iran
technological and financial support and talks on a trade deal.
"So both sides have been supposed to talk to each other to come up with the
guarantee system. It is going on but still there is more room to be developed,"
Kharazzi said.
He added that the negotiations would sink to the level of "talk in
generalities without any tangible movement" if no practical measures are taken
to open up the markets and let European technology flow to Iran.
Luxembourg's deputy Foreign Minister Nicolas Schmit was hopeful about a
positive outcome.
"I am quite optimistic we will be able to achieve an agreement," he said.
Kharrazi will be at the EU headquarters in Brussels, Belgium, for more talks
on Wednesday.
Asked about North Korea's recent claim that it possessed nuclear weapons,
Kharrazi said the Iranian situation was different because inspectors from the
International Atomic Energy Agency were still being allowed to conduct
inspections.
He said Iran was honoring the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, the
international agreement barring the spread of nuclear weapons.
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