Iran asking IAEA to exempt some centrifuges from nuclear suspension deal

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AFP: Iran has asked the UN atomic agency to exempt several dozen centrifuges from an agreement with the European
Union which went into effect two days ago freezing its nuclear fuel cycle, diplomats told AFP Wednesday.

Iran issues warning as UN nuclear watchdog mulls resolution

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AFP: Iranian officials warned the UN’s atomic energy watchdog Wednesday that an overly tough approach would jeopardise the Islamic republic’s suspension of sensitive nuclear fuel activities.

Iran has ‘sanitised’ suspected nuclear site: opposition group

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AFP: Iran has moved quickly to “sanitise” a site in northeast Tehran alleged to be at the heart of its feared pursuit of nuclear weapons, an Iranian opposition group claimed Wednesday. The National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI) also released the names of five top Iranian scientists whom it says must be quizzed by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) to help determine Tehran’s real nuclear intentions.

Iranian objections threaten nuclear deal

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The Times Online: Iran today raised last minute objections to the wording of an agreement to limit its controversial nuclear programme, raising fears of a confrontation on Thursday at a key meeting of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA). Kamal Kharrazi, the Iranian Foreign Minister, told Jack Straw, the Foreign Secretary, at a meeting in Egypt that Iran wanted
two key paragraphs reworked, two weeks after the text of the agreement was finalised in Paris.

Impunity triumphs in Iranian justice

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Reporters Without Borders: Six years after a wave of murders of intellectuals and journalists in Iran, the Kazemi, Forouhar, Charif, Mokhtari, Pouyandeh and Davani families, and other families like them, still wait to know the truth about what happened to their loved ones, while the instigators and perpetrators of these killings celebrate six long years of almost total impunity that shows no sign of stopping given the frequent displays of judicial complicity and hypocrisy in these cases, Reporters Without Borders said today.

15,000 killed in Iran’s roads in past six months

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Iran Focus: Tehran, Nov. 23 – At least 15,000 people have been killed in road accidents in the past six months, according to a senior official of Iran’s Ministry of Health. Ali Reza Moqisi, the head of the Accident Department of the Ministry stated yesterday that the death toll includes “people from all age groups”.

Bush wants proof from Iran

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The Washington Times: President Bush yesterday called for independent verification of Iran’s claim that it has stopped enriching uranium that could be used in the development of a nuclear weapon. “Well, let’s say, I hope it’s true,” Mr. Bush said in a joint press conference with Colombian President Alvaro Uribe. “And I think the definition of truth is the willingness for
the Iranian regime to allow for verification.

Iran leaves nuclear freeze to last minute

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Daily Telegraph: Iran suspended sensitive nuclear work yesterday in the hope of averting a referral to the United
Nations Security Council for possible sanctions over fears
that it is seeking to develop a nuclear bomb.

Iran bows to UN threat over nuclear programme

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The Times: Iran formally suspended its controversial uranium-enrichment programme yesterday — but doubts remain about its true intentions. The United States is convinced that Tehran is engaged in a clandestine nuclear weapons project.

Regime change may one day be better than a nuclear-armed Iran

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Daily Telegraph: The more one looks at Iran’s civil nuclear programme, the more it looks like a concerted project to build an atomic bomb. So Teheran’s decision yesterday to suspend all aspects of uranium enrichment is, on the face of it, good news because it blocks the mullahs’ most direct route to making weapons-grade fissile material.