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Tuesday, February 09, 2010  

Big powers urge Iran to reconsider nuclear offer
BRUSSELS/BERLIN Senior officials from six world powers said on Friday they were disappointed Iran had not accepted proposals intended to delay its potential to make nuclear bombs, and urged Teheran to reconsider.

But the officials, from Britain, France, the United States, Germany, Russia and China, stopped short of specific discussion of further sanctions that could be imposed on Iran, a senior EU official said after the talks in Brussels.

“We are disappointed by the lack of follow-up on the three understandings reached (in the proposed deal),” the powers said in a joint statement, which said Iran had not agreed to a meeting before the end of October to discuss the nuclear issue.

“We urge Iran to reconsider the opportunity offered by this agreement... and to engage seriously with us in dialogue and negotiations,” said the statement read out by Robert Cooper, the EU official who chaired the meeting.

The six powers met after US President Barack Obama warned there could be a package of sanctions against Iran within weeks.

A senior EU official said sanctions were discussed at the meeting in general, not specific terms. “These things are about timing and this was not the right time,” he said.

The statement said the six agreed to stay in contact on the nuclear issue and expected to hold another meeting soon.

The six powers also said Iran’s construction of a second uranium enrichment site violated UN resolutions and said the International Atomic Energy Agency would have to address the issue at a Nov. 26-27 meeting.

The head of the UN nuclear watchdog had urged Iran to accept the offer to process its enriched uranium abroad by the year-end, while advising western powers against more sanctions.

Mohamed ElBaradei said the IAEA-brokered plan was a rare chance to defuse mistrust over its nuclear programme.

“I would hope definitely that we’ll get an agreement before the end of the year,” he told a news conference in Berlin.

 “I believe frankly the ball is very much in the Iranian court. I hope they will not miss this unique but fleeting opportunity.”

ElBaradei said he did not think Teheran’s rejection of the proposal, which was not delivered in writing, was its final position, and he remained in touch with his ranian counterpart.

Reuters
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