Don’t miss the latest developments in business and finance.

UN urges nuke cooperation from NKorea, Iran, Syria

Image
AP United Nations
Last Updated : Nov 06 2013 | 4:00 AM IST
The head of the UN nuclear watchdog urged North Korea to abandon nuclear weapons, Iran to resolve outstanding issues about its suspect nuclear program, and Syria to answer questions about an alleged covert nuclear reactor.
In a report to the UN General Assembly, Yukia Amano yesterday expressed serious concern about North Korea's third and most powerful nuclear test in February 2013 and its intention to expand uranium enrichment and construct a light water reactor in violation of UN sanctions.
North Korea withdrew from the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty in 2003 and reiterated Monday that it needs nuclear weapons to deter US attacks and defend its sovereignty. Amano said the International Atomic Energy Agency has not been able to verify any measures in North Korea since April 2009.
He urged North Korea to comply with sanctions which ban nuclear tests and demand that the country "abandon all nuclear weapons and existing nuclear programs" and cooperate with the IAEA and the NPT.
Amano spoke ahead of next week's round of talks about Iran's nuclear program in Geneva between Iran's top nuclear negotiator and six world powers. Both sides described their last round of these talks in October as positive, with Tehran ready to discuss some curbs on programs that can create both atomic energy and the fissile core of nuclear arms.
Amano told the assembly that the IAEA "cannot conclude that all nuclear material in Iran is in peaceful activities" as it claims.
But he said there was "a productive meeting" last week between IAEA and Iranian officials on past and present issues regarding Iran's nuclear program.

Also Read

"Iran presented a new proposal on practical measures as a constructive contribution to strengthening cooperation and dialogue with a view to the future resolution of all outstanding issues," Amano said.
He said another meeting will be held on Nov. 11 in Tehran "in order to take this cooperation forward."
The IAEA director general also raised his report in May 2011 which concluded that a building destroyed in the Syrian desert at Dair Alzour in 2007 was "very likely" a nuclear reactor, which should have been declared to the nuclear watchdog.

More From This Section

First Published: Nov 06 2013 | 4:00 AM IST

Next Story