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Iran defiant on nuclear rights
Posted: 12 September 2009 0124 hrs

  Ayatollah Ali Khamenei
 
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TEHRAN : Supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said on Friday Iran must remain firm on its nuclear rights, as Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin said any attack on the Islamic republic over its controversial nuclear programme would be "unacceptable."

"We must stand firm for our rights. If we give up our rights, whether nuclear or other rights, this will lead to decline" of society, said Khamenei, who has the final say in all national issues.

"We will walk the path of decline if instead of using freedom for scientific and ethical progress, we use it to spread sin, instead of standing against arrogance, aggressors and international looters, we feel weak in front of them and retreat, and instead of frowning at them we smile at them."

Khamenei's remarks come two days after Tehran delivered a new package of proposals to six world powers to help resolve the stalemate over its atomic drive.

The package was delivered to representatives of Britain, China, France, Germany, Russia and the United States -- the nations tasked with persuading Iran to halt its uranium enrichment which they suspect is for making atomic weapons.

Tehran says its nuclear programme is peaceful.

The so-called P5+1 are to seek an urgent meeting with Tehran following its latest proposals.

Cristina Gallach, spokeswoman for European Union foreign policy chief Javier Solana, said the six had reached agreement in a telephone conference of officials earlier on Friday.

She said the six would meanwhile continue to examine the latest propositions from Tehran, with which they still wanted "substantive negotiations."

Gallach said earlier that Iran's proposals do not answer key questions about its own nuclear programme, adding to growing Western scepticism of the offer.

"The document is more focused on global questions than on nuclear ones," she added.

While warning that any attack on Iran over its nuclear project would be unacceptable, Putin on Friday also urged Tehran to show restraint.

"This would be very dangerous, unacceptable, this would lead to an explosion of terrorism, increase the influence of extremists," he said when asked about the possibility of an attack.

"I doubt very much that such strikes would achieve their stated goal," Putin said.

"The Iranians should show restraint in their nuclear programme. We have told Iran that it has the right to a civilian nuclear programme but that it should understand what region of the world it is in.

"This is a dangerous region and Iran should show responsibility, especially by taking into account Israel's concerns, all the more so after the absolutely unacceptable statements about the destruction of the state of Israel."

Iran's President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has said the Jewish state is doomed to be "wiped off the map."

Israel is widely considered to be the Middle East's sole -- if undeclared -- nuclear power.

Washington has also expressed disappointment over Iran's package.

"It is not really responsive to our greatest concern, which is obviously Iran's nuclear programme," Philip Crowley, the assistant secretary of state for public affairs, told reporters on Thursday.

A senior State Department official, speaking on condition of anonymity, added later: "There's nothing really new in the package itself."

A US non-profit investigative journalism group, Pro Publica, said it obtained a copy of Iran's closely-held five-page proposal, in which Tehran said it was prepared to hold "comprehensive, all-encompassing and constructive negotiations."

The talks would address nuclear disarmament as well as a global framework for the use of "clean nuclear energy," according to the document published on Pro Publica's website, but it did not address Iran's own nuclear programme.

The world powers have given Tehran a late September deadline to begin negotiations or face more sanctions. Tehran is already under three sets of UN sanctions.

France said in a statement on Friday Iran has not responded to requests for talks on its nuclear programme, and called on Tehran to attend a multilateral meeting before the UN General Assembly later this month.

Iran's package of proposals "does not constitute a response to the proposals for negotiations on the Iranian nuclear programme," foreign ministry spokeswoman Christine Fages said in Paris.

- AFP /ls

 


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