Iran to pursue atomic work despite pressure
(AP) Updated: 2006-10-16 11:43 Iran's president said Tehran
would keep up its nuclear activities despite Western countries' mounting threats
and pressures, the student news agency ISNA reported on Sunday.
Barring a change of heart by Iran, the European Union's 25 foreign ministers
want to agree at a meeting on Tuesday to ask the U.N. Security Council to impose
sanctions, German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier said on Saturday.
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad
listens to Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei speaking during Friday
prayers in Tehran October 13, 2006. Iran's president said Tehran would
keep up its nuclear activities despite Western countries' mounting threats
and pressures, the student news agency ISNA reported on Sunday.
[Reuters] |
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was defiant at a meeting with a group
of conservative officials on Saturday, saying Iran was determined to press on
with its nuclear work.
"The threats and pressures against Iran's nuclear activities will not tarnish
the will of the Iranian nation to continue its way (of achieving nuclear
technology)," Ahmadinejad said.
"The nation will not be intimidated by the threats and will continue on its
path vigorously," ISNA quoted Ahmadinejad as saying.
Iran's case has been sent back to the Security Council after it failed to
halt uranium enrichment, a process the West fears Iran is using to develop
atomic bombs despite Tehran's denials.
Iran has shrugged off the threat of sanctions in the past. Analysts say the
world's fourth largest oil exporter, which is enjoying an oil revenue windfall,
may feel it can cope with the modest penalties likely to be imposed initially.
Ahmadinejad said the request by Western countries for Iran to suspend uranium
enrichment was illegal.
"If they succeed in imposing their illegal demand on us they will increase
the pressure to impose extra demands," Ahmadinejad said. "By God's grace they
will not be able to stand against the Iranian nation," he said.
Iran has proposed forming a consortium for uranium enrichment with other
countries, saying it would be a way for them to monitor its atomic work to prove
it was peaceful.
Iran has said it opposes atomic weapons and, in previous statements, has
called for nuclear disarmament by all countries.
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