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Iran to disclose new nuclear achievements on Tuesday

Iran Materials 7 April 2008 19:37 (UTC +04:00)

(dpa) - Iran is to disclose new achievements in its nuclear programme on Tuesday, Foreign Ministry spokesman Mohammad-Ali Hosseini said Monday in a press briefing in Tehran.

The foreign press is invited Tuesday to attend the so-called "National Day of Nuclear Achievement" which marks the first anniversary of Iran having achieved uranium enrichment on an industrial level.

The spokesman did not give any details and left it to President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad to reveal the new achievements on Tuesday evening in Tehran.

It is widely expected that Ahmadinejad will announce the installation and operation of 300 further centrifuges at the Natanz nuclear plant in central Iran.

The new centrifuges are said to be of the P2 kind which have a higher enrichment speed that the P1 centrifuges previously used.

Iran reportedly has 3,000 centrifuges but needs at least 50,000 to provide the necessary fuel for its nuclear power plants in the future.

The ISNA news agency reported meanwhile that Ahmadinejad will personally visit the Natanz plant on Tuesday morning to inspect the latest developments there.

Ahmadinejad considers the nuclear developments as the highlight of his political achievements since his presidency in August 2005 but his critics say the nuclear dispute with the West has pushed the country towards international isolation.

Spokesman Hosseini once again rejected the main Western demand of suspension of uranium enrichment and said that even Western incentives would not change the Iranian position.

He called on the West to instead respect the rights of other nations, including Iran, to pursue civil nuclear technology in line with regulations within the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.

The spokesman said there have been no new contacts between European Union foreign policy chief Javier Solana and Iran's chief nuclear negotiator Saeid Jalili, adding that any new talks should primarily be based on acknowledging Iran's nuclear rights.

The last meeting between Solana and Jalili was held in November in London but ended without any tangible results.

Following the third United Nations Security Council resolution against Iran last March, President Ahmadinejad ordered a stop to nuclear negotiations with the EU.

While Iran insists that its nuclear programmes are peaceful, the Western world fears that Iran is working on a secret military programme.

Tehran has so far categorically denied the charges and has referred to the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) as the only body authorized to judge the dispute.

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