Iran has
said that it will be “out of the question” for the UN atomic watchdog to
question Iranian scientists and inspect military sites as part of a
final nuclear agreement with world powers.
“Interviews
with scientists are completely out of the question and so is the
inspection of military sites,” senior Iranian negotiator Abbas Araghchi
told state television on Saturday.
The head
of the UN’s atomic watchdog Yukiya Amano told the AFP news agency in an
interview this week that if Iran signs a nuclear deal with world powers
it will have to accept inspections of its military sites.
Araghchi’s
comments came as Iran’s Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif and his
US counterpart John Kerry were holding crucial talks in Geneva to try
and hammer out a historic nuclear deal ahead of a June 30 deadline.
Iran’s
supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei last week ruled out allowing
nuclear inspectors to visit military sites or the questioning of
scientists.
And Zarif
has said the Additional Protocol of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation
Treaty, which Iran has accepted, allows “some access” but not
inspections of military sites.
“Anyway
we are continuing our negotiations in the framework of procedures
predicted by the Additional Protocol. There isn’t and hasn’t been any
agreement yet,” said Araghchi.
“One of the questions we are discussing is how the Additional Protocol should be implemented,” he said.
The protocol allows for snap inspections of Iran’s nuclear facilities, and if required, of its military sites.
But Iran insists that such access should be regulated and must be justified.
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