IRAN WILL NOT BOW TO THREATS: ROUHANI

         Tehran, 7 Muharram 1435/11 November 2013 (MINA) – Iran will not stop its uranium enrichment programme, President Hassan Rouhani told the Parliament on Sunday, even as Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu urged world powers not to rush into signing a “dangerous” deal with Iran, and ease sanctions while Tehran continued uranium enrichment.

         “For us, red lines are not to be crossed. The rights of the Iranian nation and [our] national interests are our red lines; and those rights include nuclear rights within the framework of international law, as well as enrichment on Iranian soil,” Rouhani said, The Hindu quoted by Mi’raj News Agency (MINA) as reporting.

         “Sanctions, threats, contempt and discrimination” would not be effective, he said. The Islamic Republic “will not bow to threats by any power.” Early Sunday, the five UN veto powers and Germany failed to agree on an initial nuclear deal with Iran that would have asked for mutual concessions, after three days of highlevel talks in Geneva.

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        A new round of talks to clinch a temporary deal on halting parts of Iran’s nuclear programme in return for suspension of some sanctions was scheduled for November 20-21 in Geneva.

Talks with IAEA

         Meanwhile the head of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), Yukiya Amano, was to hold talks in Tehran Monday with high-ranking Iranian officials. They plan to sign an agreement to lay out future technical cooperation.

         Iran has been demanding that embargoes be lifted on oil exports and the banking sector, and it would especially like to see those sanctions suspended that most directly affect the general public.

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        Rouhani described the sanctions as “illegal and inefficient.” Netanyahu warned against easing sanctions without receiving enough in return.

        He said he spoke with US President Barack Obama, Russian President Vladimir Putin, French President Francois Hollande, German Chancellor Angela Merkel and British Prime Minister David Cameron via telephone this weekend.

        “I told them that according to all the information that is reaching Israel, the deal in the works is bad and dangerous,” he told his cabinet meeting in southern Israel.

         In the deal discussed this week in Geneva, the six countries aimed to halt Iran’s current efforts to enrich uranium to 20 per cent.

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        Since Iran’s covert nuclear programme came to light 10 years ago, the six countries have been trying to negotiate a halt to Tehran’s atomic activities, fearing that they are part of a nuclear weapons programme.

        Iran has repeatedly said that it only needs the technology to make electricity and for other civilian uses. (T/P09/E1).

Mi’raj News Agency (MINA).

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