Iran rejects idea of talks on nuclear programme
Tehran,
Oct
8:
Negotiations
over
Iran's
nuclear
enrichment
activities
would
be
meaningless
because
the
country
has
a
legal
right
to
pursue
the
technology,
President
Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad
was
quoted
as
saying
today.
The West suspects Tehran is developing its nuclear programme to produce atomic weapons but Iran says it is only pursuing a means to produce electricity for civilian needs.
Tehran has defied UN resolutions calling on it to suspend uranium enrichment, and on Sunday Ahmadinejad rejected the idea of holding talks on the issue.
''It is meaningless to hold talks over Iran's obvious and legal right to nuclear technology,'' the news agency ISNA quoted him as saying.
The United States severed relations with Tehran's after its 1979 Islamic revolution which toppled the US-backed Shah.
Washington also accuses Shi'ite Muslim Iran of providing funds, arms and training to Iraqi Shi'ite militants and of supporting terrorism. Iran denies the charge, blaming the US-led invasion in 2003 for the bloodshed in Iraq.
On Wednesday, US President George W. Bush said Washington had made it clear to Iran that negotiations were possible if it shut down the programme, although last month Bush's top diplomat Condoleezza Rice said she did not expect any talks soon.
Ahmadinejad said Iran was not seeking dialogue.
''We have never asked for holding talks with America. Talks can be held only if America changes its behaviour fundamentally,'' he said, according to the agency.
''We should set conditions for talks, not Bush.'' The UN Security Council has imposed two series of sanctions on Iran over its nuclear programme and Washington is pushing hard for a third.
However, major powers have agreed to hold off until November to await a report by European Union negotiator Javier Solana and to see whether Iran, under a pact with the UN nuclear watchdog, explains the scope of its activities.
Reuters
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