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IAEA chief in Iran seeking tougher checks on country's nuclear programme

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The UN nuclear watchdog chief Rafael Grossi is in Iran seeking tougher checks on the country's nuclear programme.

The IAEA faces increasing difficulty in monitoring the Islamic Republic's rapidly advancing nuclear programme, exacerbate­d by tensions across the wider Middle East over the Israel-Hamas war.

Grossi has already warned that

Tehran has enough uranium enriched to near-weapons-grade levels to make "several" nuclear bombs.

He has acknowledg­ed the agency can't guarantee that none of Iran's centrifuge­s may have been peeled away for secret enrichment.

But the head of Iran's atomic energy organisati­on said that cooperatio­n with the IAEA and adherence to the Nuclear Non-Proliferat­ion Treaty "tops the policies and strategy of the Islamic Republic." "22 per cent of IAEA inspection­s are done in Iran. This amount of inspection­s has never been done in any country throughout history," said

Mohammad Eslami.

But in keeping with officials who have always maintained Iran's nuclear programme is for peaceful purposes, added that Tehran "will expand nuclear technology with determinat­ion."

But Iran has limited the IAEA's ability to conduct proper checks on its nuclear activities and the UN agency faces several challenges from Tehran's failure to explain uranium traces found at undeclared sites to barring almost all the IAEA's top enrichment experts.

Landmark deal

The landmark nuclear deal, officially known as the Joint Comprehens­ive Plan of Action, was signed by Iran, mostly Western countries, and the

European Union in 2015.

That agreement saw Iran receive sanctions relief in return for placing limits on its nuclear activities, particular­ly the degree to which it enriches uranium.

But the deal was derailed in 2018 when then-president Donald Trump withdrew the United States from it, slamming it as "the worst deal in history".

The White House then slapped a ra of new sanctions back on Iran, adopting a 'maximum pressure' campaign in a bid to force the country to limit its nuclear activities.

That campaign had the opposite effect, driving Iran further from its JCPOA commitment­s. Iran has since started exceeding agreed-upon limits of enriched uranium and developed new centrifuge­s.

 ?? ?? A man walks past a banner showing missiles being launched from an Iranian map in Tehran, April 19, 2024
A man walks past a banner showing missiles being launched from an Iranian map in Tehran, April 19, 2024

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