The National - News

UN’s atomic agency warns that Iran is limiting ‘co-operation’ with inspectors

- SOPHIE ESTIENNE

Iran is barely co-operating with the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency, which feels it is being held “hostage” to the country’s disputes with western countries, the agency’s director general Rafael Grossi said.

Mr Grossi said the situation at the Ukrainian nuclear power plant of Zaporizhzh­ia was “extremely worrying”, even if there are no signs the plant has become a military installati­on.

The agency has been struggling since 2021 to carry out controls on Iran’s nuclear programme, which continues to expand even as Tehran denies it wants to make nuclear weapons.

“It’s a very frustratin­g situation. We continue our activities there, but at a minimum,” Mr Grossi told delegates at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerlan­d.

“They are restrictin­g co-operation in a very unpreceden­ted way.”

“It’s a way to punish us because of external things,” he said. “When there’s something that France, the UK or the US says that they don’t like, it is as if they were taking the IAEA hostage to their political disputes with others. This is unacceptab­le for us.”

Iran last year slowed down its pace of uranium enrichment, which was seen as a goodwill gesture while informal talks began with the US.

However, it accelerate­d enrichment once again towards the end of last year.

“There is a plateau at the moment, but it could change in the next few days,” Mr Grossi said. “We never know.”

The already poor relations between Washington and Tehran have worsened with the conflict between Israel and Palestinia­n militant group Hamas in Gaza.

Each nation has accused the other of inflaming the situation, further complicati­ng efforts to rein in Iran’s nuclear programme.

“Diplomacy, diplomacy, diplomacy, this is what we need. We need to continue talking, we need to prevent the situation deteriorat­ing to a degree where it would be impossible to retrieve it. I would not exclude returning to Iran,” Mr Grossi said.

Russia has also blocked agency inspectors from visiting the Zaporizhzh­ia nuclear plant, which has been occupied by Russian forces since March 2022, soon after the start of its invasion of Ukraine.

The plant is within a combat zone making it structural­ly unstable. Mr Grossi said his inspectors needed to be granted access.

“We have been able to confirm that there is no militarisa­tion of the plant, in the sense of having heavy military equipment or artillery equipment there,” he said.

“In the past few months, there haven’t been any direct attacks on the plant.”

On the other hand, “we’ve had problems in terms of blackouts, and interrupti­on of external power supply, which are equally dangerous because if we lose power, we lose the capacity to cool the reactors and of course, there could be an accident.”

The agency warned on Tuesday that Iran has the highest grade uranium for a non-nuclear weapon country.

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