Business Day (Nigeria)

UN nuclear watchdog contender calls for strict Iran policing

Argentine diplomat Rafael Grossi is vying to lead the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency

- BENEDICT MANDER IN BUENOS AIRES, NAJMEH BOZORGMEHR IN TEHRAN AND MICHAEL PEEL IN BRUSSELS

The Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency must be unyielding in reporting any failure by Iran to comply with a landmark nuclear agreement that is gradually unravellin­g, according to a leading contender to head the UN’S nuclear watchdog.

Rafael Grossi, an Argentine diplomat who is in the running to take over the IAEA after the death of its previous director-general, Yukiya Amano, in July, said the agency had to “tell it as it is” and stick to its mandate of policing compliance with the 2015 deal.

The atomic deal has come close to collapse since US president Donald Trump pulled out of it last year.

The IAEA had consistent­ly found Iran to be honouring its pledges under the accord, but the Islamic republic said in May it would gradually decrease its commitment­s to limit uranium enrichment activities. Iran has promised to renew its full compliance if European states do more to help it withstand US sanctions.

Mr Grossi, 58, told the Financial Times that Iran’s stepping up of uranium enrichment may not threaten an imminent crisis, but was “a serious matter” that must be handled “extremely prudently” to avoid further escalation. “Stability must be restored,” he said.

The nuclear deal, which gave Iran relief from internatio­nal sanctions in return for curbs on its atomic programme, aimed to keep the country at least one year away from amassing

enough fissile material to make a nuclear weapon.

Mr Grossi indicated that Iran’s position had not changed in the recent past, saying it was still little more than a year away from reaching a “breakthrou­gh”.

Iran insists that it has no intention of building a nuclear weapon. Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Iran’s supreme leader, has issued a binding religious decree which forbids proliferat­ion and use of nuclear weapons.

Mr Grossi said it was an open question whether Iran’s enrichment move was a protest at economic hardship caused by US sanctions or a “deliberate accelerate­d effort” that could lead to a “more problemati­c situation”.

On Sunday Iran’s Revolution­ary Guards announced it had seized a foreign oil tanker for smuggling fuel last Wednesday, the latest detention of a vessel amid elevated tensions in the Gulf. Iran did not disclose the nationalit­ies of the tanker or its seven foreign crew members.

Mr Grossi is currently Argentina’s ambassador to Austria, and the country’s representa­tive to internatio­nal organisati­ons based in Vienna, which is the home of the IAEA.

Despite the “gloom and despair” provoked by the situation in Iran, he cast doubt on whether the world was entering a new era of nuclear proliferat­ion.

“History is not linear,” said Mr Grossi, arguing that just two years ago the world was far more worried about an “alarming” build-up of weapons in North Korea.

Mr Trump has held three meetings and exchanged warm words with Kim Jong Un, North Korea’s leader, but the commitment­s agreed so far have been vague and there have been no firm indication­s that Pyongyang has curbed its nuclear programme.

 ??  ?? Rafael Grossi cast doubt on whether the world was entering a new era of nuclear proliferat­ion © AFP
Rafael Grossi cast doubt on whether the world was entering a new era of nuclear proliferat­ion © AFP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria