Iran complying with interim nuclear accord: IAEAby aletho |
Press TV - April 17, 2014
The
United Nations’ nuclear monitoring body says Iran is complying with the
terms of an interim nuclear agreement struck between the Islamic
Republic and six world powers late last year.
In its monthly report released on Thursday,
the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) said Tehran has diluted
half of its uranium earlier enriched to the 20-percent purity to a lower
grade to power reactors.
The
other half of the stockpile is to be converted into a form that would
be relatively difficult to be reconverted to the 20 percent level.
On Wednesday, IAEA head Yukiya Amano said, “I can tell you, these measures [by Iran] are being implemented as planned.”
Iran
and the six world powers – the United States, France, Britain, Russia,
China and Germany – sealed an interim deal in Geneva on November 24,
2013 to pave the way for the full resolution of the decade-old dispute
with Iran over the country’s nuclear energy program. The deal came into
force on January 20.
Under
the Geneva deal, dubbed the Joint Plan of Action, the six countries
have undertaken to provide Iran with some sanctions relief in exchange
for the Islamic Republic agreeing to limit certain aspects of its
nuclear activities during a six-month period.
Iran and the six powers are scheduled to resume expert-level talks on Tehran’s nuclear energy program in New York May 5-9.
The
negotiations will be held ahead of a fresh round of high-level nuclear
talks between Iran and the P5+1 group, scheduled to begin in the
Austrian capital, Vienna, on May 13.
Tehran and the six countries wrapped up their latest round of high-level nuclear talks in Vienna on April 9.

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