Log in to your IBTimes Account

close
ID
Password
  • Set your IBTimes.com Edition

Iran demands EU apology before any nuclear talks



By Fredrik Dahl And Parisa Hafezi
01 July 2009 @ 10:29 am ET

TEHRAN – Iran, stung by European Union criticism of its handling of post-election unrest, on Wednesday accused the 27-nation bloc of meddling and demanded an apology before any more talks on Tehran's disputed nuclear program.



Abbasali Kadkhodai, spokesman of the Guardian Council, speaks with journalists at a news conference in Tehran June 30, 2009. (REUTERS / Morteza Nikoubazl )
1 of 1

Iran's top military commander laid down the condition amid continued recriminations over the June 12 presidential election that returned hard-liner Mahmoud Ahmadinejad to power, beating rivals who insist the vote was rigged in his favor.

"Because of the interference of this (EU) group in the post-election riots ... they have lost their qualification to hold nuclear talks with Iran," Major-General Hassan Firouzabadi was quoted as saying by the semi-official Fars news agency.

Three EU powers, Britain, France and Germany, have led negotiations with Iran over nuclear work which the West suspects is aimed at bomb-making. Tehran says it is wholly peaceful.

"Before apologizing for their huge mistake ... they have no right to talk about nuclear negotiations," Firouzabadi said.

Together with the United States, Russia and China, the EU nations have offered a package of economic and other incentives to Iran if it will stop enriching uranium, a process that can produce fuel for power plants, or, potentially, a nuclear bomb.

Iran has rejected the demand, saying it has the right to pursue such work as a member of the Non-Proliferation Treaty.

U.S. President Barack Obama's administration had offered to join the negotiations, but the turmoil after the election has dimmed prospects for any American engagement with Tehran.

Iranian hardliners, consolidating their grip after security forces suppressed huge street protests, have blamed foreign powers for the unrest, the gravest since the 1979 Islamic revolution.

Iran and Britain exchanged more hostile words about the post-election protests, with the Fars agency alleging that an Iranian employee at the British embassy had helped foment them.

The authorities detained nine Iranian employees at the British embassy on Sunday, but most have been freed.

"REMARKABLE ROLE"

"Among the three detained British embassy staff there was one who ... had a remarkable role during the recent unrest in managing it behind the scenes," Fars said, citing no source.

It said another staffer, who had been a "main element behind the riots," was freed because she had diplomatic immunity.

British Foreign Secretary David Miliband told Ireland's RTE radio he believed two embassy employees were still held, describing the detentions and the previous expulsion of two British diplomats as "completely contrary to the sort of good political engagement that Iran says that it wants."

He said the violence the Iranian government had perpetrated against its people since the election was shocking. "In the modern world, the truth will out and I hope that it comes out before too many more bones are broken and lives lost in Iran."

Swedish Foreign Minister Carl Bildt said Iran and the EU shared an interest in protecting diplomatic staff.

Asked whether there was a recommendation for EU countries to withdraw ambassadors from Tehran, he told Reuters: "We are taking one step at a time. At the moment we are in a state of dialogue with the Iranian authorities about these issues."

Bildt, speaking in Stockholm on the sidelines of a meeting at the start of Sweden's six-month EU presidency, said EU nations must act to protect Iranian diplomatic missions, while the Iranians "have to ensure that staff at the European embassies are not subject to harassment by the authorities."

Ahmadinejad canceled a trip to Libya for an African Union summit that would have given him another chance to burnish his image at a potentially friendly international forum.

Copyright 2009 Thomson Reuters. All rights reserved.

    Click!
  • Rate this article:

Comments

Post Your Comment

*Name


advertisement
More Politics & Policy
Democrats in the U.S. Senate cleared the first procedural hurdle for sweeping healthcare reform on Saturday by voting to open debate on the historic legi...
Democrats in the U.S. Senate cleared the first procedural hurdle for sweeping healthcare reform on Saturday by voting to open debate on the historic legi...
President Barack Obama's U.S. healthcare overhaul plan has cleared an important Senate hurdle but lawmakers warned on Sunday of challenges ahead in winni...

advertisement
Advertisement
POS Magnetic Card Readers

Online distributor for point of sale equipment, TYSSO and Pegasus.

 
IBTimes.com Web
Partners
International Business Times© 2009 The Ibtimes Company. All Rights Reserved. Terms of service | Privacy Policy | Advertising | About Us | Contact Us | Archives