The Borneo Post (Sabah)

US says ex-consultant set up meetings over Iran’s nuclear programme

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NEW YORK: US prosecutor­s said in a court filing on Friday that a former consultant to Iran’s mission to the United Nations recruited a United States-based atomic scientist to meet with Iranian officials about Iran’s nuclear programme.

The filing regarding the former consultant, Ahmad Sheikhzade­h, does not contain criminal charges, but was made to support prosecutor­s’ request for a tough prison sentence for him for tax fraud and conspiracy to violate sanctions against Iran.

Sheikhzade­h pleaded guilty last November to the charges, which do not involve the Iranian nuclear programme.

In the filing, prosecutor­s said that, starting around 2005, Sheikhzade­h helped arrange meetings between the scientist and Iran’s current president, Hassan Rouhani, previously the country’s chief negotiator on nuclear issues, and Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif, formerly Iran’s permanent representa­tive to the United Nations.

Sheikhzade­h’s lawyer, Steve Zissou, said on Friday, “The only goal Dr Sheikhzade­h has ever had was to improve relations between the two countries so that they could both live in peace.”

A spokesman for Iran’s mission to the United Nations did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

Prosecutor­s did not name the scientist, who they said was an Iranian national who had worked at a US nuclear power plant.

They said the scientist, working with Sheikhzade­h,

The only goal Dr Sheikhzade­h has ever had was to improve relations between the two countries so that they could both live in peace. — Steve Zissou, Sheikhzade­h’s lawyer

provided advice to help Iran negotiate with other countries over its nuclear programme. For example, they said, he gave an estimate of how many gas centrifuge­s - devices used in enriching uranium - Iran would need to accomplish its nuclear goals.

The scientist also helped develop Iran’s public messaging around the nuclear programme, prosecutor­s said.

Iran reached a deal with the United States and other nations in 2015 to limit its nuclear programme in exchange for relief from internatio­nal sanctions. US President Donald Trump has criticised the deal and in April ordered that it be reviewed.

Federal guidelines call for a sentence of up to four years and nine months for the crimes Sheikhzade­h pleaded guilty to, but prosecutor­s on Friday said in their filing that his “brazen” conduct warranted more than that.

Sheikhzade­h is scheduled to be sentenced on July 17 by US District Judge Pamela Chen in Brooklyn. Zissou asked in a letter filed with the court on Friday to postpone the sentencing in light of the new filing.

Authoritie­s originally charged thatSheikh­zadehunder-reported his UN income on his personal tax returns. They also said he used his bank account to help US-based co-conspirato­rs invest money in Iran, violating sanctions. — Reuters

 ??  ?? File photo shows Sheikhzade­h leaving the Brooklyn Federal Court in New York. — Reuters photo
File photo shows Sheikhzade­h leaving the Brooklyn Federal Court in New York. — Reuters photo

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