Gulf Today

Iran hides informatio­n on N-activities, says IAEA

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BRUSSELS: The head of the United Nations’ (UN) atomic watchdog said on Tuesday Iran was dragging its feet on informatio­n about uranium particles found at old undeclared sites in the country, raising the prospect of a clash on the issue in June.

Talks to revive Iran’s 2015 nuclear deal with world powers have been on hold since March, chiefly over Tehran’s insistence that Washington remove the Islamic Revolution­ary Guard Corps (IRGC), its elite security force, from the US Foreign Terrorist Organizati­on (FTO) list.

While not technicall­y part of the nuclear deal, one issue causing tension and distrust between Tehran and the West had been Iran’s demand for the closure of the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency’s (IAEA) investigat­ion into uranium particles found at three apparently old but undeclared sites.

Those sites suggest that Iran had nuclear material there that it did not declare to the agency.

Iran and the UN nuclear watchdog had agreed a three-month plan on March 5 for a series of exchanges ater which IAEA chief Rafael Grossi “will aim to report his conclusion by the June 2022 (IAEA) Board of Governors” meeting, which begins on June 6.

However, Western diplomats have said there is litle sign that Tehran has given satisfacto­ry answers to the watchdog.

Speaking to the EU parliament, Grossi said he remained extremely concerned by the situation and had told Iran that he found it difficult to imagine that the nuclear deal could be finalised if the IAEA had serious doubts about things that it should have known about.

“I am not trying to pass an alarmist message that we are at a dead end but the situation does not look very good. Iran has not been forthcomin­g in the type of informatio­n we need from them,” Grossi told European Parliament commitees via webstream.

The EU’S Iran nuclear talks coordinato­r Enrique Mora arrives in Tehran on Tuesday in what he has described as the last bullet to save the deal, which also includes Russia, China, France, Britain and Germany.

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