Mohamed Elbaradei, general secretary of the International Atomic
Energy Agency (IAEA) urged Iran again in Vienna on Thursday to
suspend its nuclear activities in order to help the Iran's nuclear
issues to be solved as soon as possible.
The photo taken on Nov.
22, 2007 shows the headquarters of the International Atomic Energy
Agency (IAEA) in Vienna of Austria. The two-day meeting of the
Board of Governors of IAEA started on Thursday and 35 members of
the board of the governors of IAEA discussed the report on Iran's
Nuclear Program by Mohamed ElBaradei.
Elbaradei's new report on Iran's nuclear issues was the main
topic for discussion of the ongoing IAEA's 35-nation board of
governors conference, which is held on Nov. 22 and 23 and focus on
the Korean Peninsula nuclear issues and Iran's nuclear issues.
Elbaradei said in his opening address at the conference that
earlier the negotiation between Iran and the six-parties of the
United States, Russia, China, Britain, France and Germany could be
resumed, the perspective of the mitigation of Iran's nuclear crisis
would be more optimistic.
He praised Tehran highly of its "better cooperation" with the
agency to clarify the open issues related to its nuclear program,
and called on Iran to provide the cooperation "much active" and
"rapid" in the future.
Speaking to journalists during the conference, Ali Asghar
Soltanieh, ambassador of Iran to the IAEA warned that the western
countries proposed sanction imposed on Iran might result in
"negative ending."
According to the action plan worked out by Tehran and the agency
on Aug. 21, Iran agreed to submit sensible information to the
agency and answer the still open questions related to its nuclear
issues.
Elbaradei submitted the new report on Iran's nuclear issues to
the board of governors, which acknowledged Iran's cooperation with
the agency of clarification on the open issues was "sufficient,"
while the United States, Britain and Germany continuously censured
that Iran did not suspend its uranium enrichment activities in
compliance with the resolution of the United Nations Security
Council.
(Xinhua News Agency November 23, 2007)