UN nuclear chief regrets ‘very slow’ progress on Iran monitoring
Vienna, Austria (AFP):
UN nuclear watchdog chief Rafael Grossi warned Monday that cooperation with Iran on better monitoring its nuclear programme was “very slow”, saying while some cameras and other equipment had been installed again “a lot more” needed to be done.
In March, Iran agreed to reconnect surveillance cameras at several nuclear sites almost a year after they were turned off.
Grossi said “implementing a number of voluntary additional monitoring and verification measures” as agreed in March was “going very slow”.
“There is a lot more that needs to be done… We need to go faster,” he told reporters after opening a regular meeting of the 35-member board of governors of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).
Earlier, in his statement to the board, he said “some progress has been made, but not as much as I had hoped”, adding that what had been done so far was “a fraction of what we envisaged”.
The agency, however, noted progress in its cooperation with Iran in a separate report saying it has decided to, for now, close the file on nuclear material at an undeclared site.
The issue of the material found at Marivan in Abedeh county has long exacerbated relations between the two parties.
Grossi said Iran’s explanation — that the particles could be from Soviet-era mining conducted there — was “plausible, not impossible”.
The IAEA previously assessed that “there have been a number of explosives experiments in the past”, he reiterated.
When asked about criticism of Iran arch-foe Israel on closing the file, Grossi insisted his agency had not bowed to any pressures.
“We never, ever water down our standards, we stand by our standards,” he said, describing the IAEA as “fair but firm”.