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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Iran to West: Accept nuke deal as is
2010-05-23
Iranian Parliament Speaker Ali Larijani warned on Saturday that Iran would not abide by the agreement to send much of its enriched uranium to Turkey for further enrichment, if the G5+1 powers negotiating with Iran over its nuclear program do not approve it in its entirety.

If the powers: the US, UK, France, Russia and China seek to lay any further conditions on Iran beyond those negotiated with Brazil and Turkey, Larijani said, Teheran would withdraw from the deal.

"It will not be compatible with the Teheran Declaration if they have extra demands and pursue deception," he was quoted as saying by Australia's Herald Sun.

Deputy Parliament Speaker Mohammad Reza Bahonar said earlier on Saturday, Iran would abandon the fuel deal if the UN Security Council approves the fourth round of sanctions against Iran currently under consideration.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Iran to snub fuel-swap deal if sanctions imposed
2010-05-21
TEHRAN - A top Iranian MP said Tehran will withdraw from a deal to swap low-enriched uranium for fuel for a research reactor if the UN Security Council slaps more sanctions on the country, the ISNA news agency reported Thursday.

“There is the likelihood of another set of sanctions being issued against Iran, but we have already said that if it goes through then our commitments (on the LEU swap) agreement will no longer be considered,' deputy parliamentary speaker Mohammad Reza Bahonar was quote as saying.

Bahonar's remark comes two days after Tehran's archfoe, Washington, and other world powers dismissed Tehran's agreement to send around half its stock of LEU to Turkey in exchange for higher-enriched nuclear fuel.

On Tuesday, the United States submitted a draft UN resolution calling for an international clampdown on Iranian banks, shipping and business dealings that might be linked to its nuclear activities. The draft has the blessing of all five of the veto-wielding permanent members of the Security Council, including the usual standouts China and Russia, Washington said.

Already under three sets of UN sanctions over its defiance of repeated ultimatums to suspend uranium enrichment,
... none of which have worked ...
Iran touted its agreement with Brazil and Turkey as a goodwill gesture that paves the way for a resumption of talks with the major powers.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Parliament bloc seeks to oust Larijani from Speakership
2009-10-05
[Iran Press TV Latest] In the continuing political posturing at various levels since Iran's June 12 presidential elections, some Principlist lawmakers have put out rumors of a bid to oust the Speaker of the Majlis as the majority leader.

Ali Larijani, the outgoing and highly influential speaker of the Iranian Parliament (Majlis), is considered a heavyweight principlist who heads the majority principlist bloc in the Majlis that, for the most part, backed President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's re-election bid.

Before taking the helm at the Majlis, Larijani was the influential Secretary of the Supreme National Security Council and Iran's chief nuclear negotiator.

Though a common critic of former opposition candidates, Mir-Hossein Mousavi and Mehdi Karroubi, Larijani has been regarded as 'too mild' by some of President Ahmadinejad's more ardent supporters.

The reported parliamentary measures against Larijani, however, are opposed by the minority Reformist bloc of the Majlis.

"With the removal of Larijani from the Speaker's chair, the pro-government faction pursues a Majlis which is (only) a formality," said the spokesman of the Reformist bloc, Dariush Qanbari, according to an October 4 report in 'Perlemannews,' a web news outlet reflecting the views of the minority, reformist bloc of the Majlis.

"Because of his independent position, the pro-government bloc is trying very hard to eliminate Larijani from the Majlis, Qanbari, a vocal Ahmadinejad critic, claims.

"If this occurs, then nothing will be left of the independence of the Majlis, and the assembly will fall into the hands of the government," he added.

From the other side of the Majlis, the influential Principlist Majlis Deputy Speaker, Mohammad Reza Bahonar explained: "It seems that the Principlist bloc feels that [it is better for] the Speaker to be different from the head of the Principlist' bloc."

"It is better and more expedient for him (Larijani) to continue to lead the Principlist bloc," added Bahonar, who has often criticized Ahmadinejad himself.

Bahonar claimed that Larijani was also reluctant to hold both positions simultaneously.

"The people's representatives make decisions in a way to increase unity among the Principlist bloc," he said.

Under Iranian constitution, the three arms of the state - executive, legislative and judiciary - are clearly separated.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Khatami, Karroubi join Mousavis Green movement
2009-08-19
[Iran Press TV Latest] Former Iranian president Mohammad Khatami and opposition leader Mehdi Karroubi will join the leadership of a new party to be formed by Mir-Hossein Mousavi.

Last week, defeated presidential candidate Mousavi announced that he was working on forging a new party -- named the Green Path of Hope Association -- to pursue his political goals.

Alireza Beheshti, a senior aide to Mousavi, said on Tuesday that Khatami and Karroubi would be members of the party's central council, ILNA news agency reported on Tuesday.

"The central council of the Green Path of Hope will be a small group of five to six, including Mr. Khatami and Mr. Karroubi," Beheshti said.

He added that the party would also include a 'counseling board consisting of 30 to 40 members' who are to be chosen over time; as well as 'monitoring committees'.

After the re-election of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in the June 12 vote, both Mousavi and Karroubi rejected the results as 'fraudulent'. Their allegations of vote-rigging, however, were dismissed by Iran's electoral watchdog, the Guardian Council.

Mousavi has vowed his new party will continue to 'defend the rights and votes of citizens that were crushed in the election'.

Most of the Principlist figures have demanded that Mousavi and other senior opposition figures be barred from the political arena, while others have reacted to Mousavi's plans with more caution.

Iran' Vice Parliament Speaker, Mohammad-Reza Bahonar, said on Tuesday that Mousavi's new party would be welcome if it is formed 'within the framework of the law', ILNA reported.

"The legal aspects of the movement [the Green Path of Hope Association] should be clearer," the senior Principlist figure added.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Iran lawmaker pronounces Cabinet sessions illegal
2009-07-27
[Iran Press TV Latest] After the dismissal of Iran's intelligence minister, a lawmaker declares as 'illegal' all Cabinet sessions of the current government until President Ahmadinejad's official inauguration for his second term. "More than half of the Cabinet members have been changed. So, in less than two weeks before the government's tenure, the Cabinet sessions are illegal and cannot pass ratifications," Vice Speaker of Parliament Mohammad-Reza Bahonar told Mehr News Agency on Sunday.

According to Article 136 of Iran's Constitution, if more than half of the members of Cabinet are replaced, "the government must seek a fresh vote of confidence from Parliament."

"If such changes occur in normal conditions, the president has to introduce the entire members of the Cabinet to the Majlis and seek a vote of confidence. But within two weeks, we cannot do this," he added. The lawmaker reiterated that after President Ahmadinejad's official inauguration, the Cabinet sessions would be "legal".

Bahonar's remarks came after Ahmadinejad chose to sack Intelligence Minister Gholam-Hossein Mohseni-Ejei on Sunday. Mahmoud Ahmadinejad will be sworn in as the Iranian president for a second term on August 5, a day after he is officially approved by the Leader of the Islamic Revolution, Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Iran says new UN Security Council resolution "unacceptable"
2007-03-26
A senior Iranian member of parliament said on Sunday that the new UN Security Council resolution with tougher sanctions against Tehran is "unacceptable, " local Mehr news agency reported. Alaeddin Boroujerdi, chief of Iran's parliamentary national security and foreign affairs, described the Resolution 1747 that urges Iran to suspend uranium enrichment work is "unacceptable and inapplicable," Mehr said. "Iran will keep on pursuing its path within the framework of the nuclear rules...(and) advise the 5+1 group to return to the negotiating table quickly and without preconditions," Boroujerdi was quoted as saying.

He referred to the five permanent UN Security Council members, namely Britain, China, France, Russia and the United States, plus Germany. Boroujerdi also said that the Iranian parliament will consider its response to the new resolution after Iran's New Year holiday, which ends on April 3.

Mohammad-Reza Bahonar, vice-speaker of the Iranian parliament, has also defended his country's right to develop nuclear technology, Iran's state television reported Sunday on its website. "Iran is a member of the Non-Proliferation Treaty and therefore it has the right to attain peaceful nuclear technology as other members have," Bahonar said Saturday night shortly after the UN Security Council unanimously adopted the resolution. "We can continue our negotiations over the case if it is returned to the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)," he added.

Resolution 1747, cosponsored by Britain, France and Germany and incorporating some of the amendments proposed by Indonesia, Qatar and South Africa, urges Iran to suspend uranium enrichment work " without further delay."
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Iran MPs back nuclear policy
2006-12-27
Iran's parliament has passed a bill obliging the government to "revise" the level of its cooperation with the IAEA nuclear watchdog after the United Nations approved sanctions on Tehran over its atomic program.

The UN Security Council voted unanimously on Saturday to impose sanctions on Iran's trade in sensitive nuclear materials and technology, in an attempt to stop uranium enrichment work that could produce material that could be used in bombs.

"The government is obliged to revise its cooperation level with the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)," said the bill, which was read out during a parliament session broadcast live on state radio.

The bill also obliges President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's government to "accelerate Iran's nuclear activities", in defiance of the council's calls to halt nuclear enrichment, which the West fears is a cover to build atomic weapons.

The hardline Guardian Council, a watchdog body, swiftly approved the bill. Deputy Parliament Speaker Mohammad Reza Bahonar said it was the first time since the 1979 Islamic revolution that the council approved a bill in 5 minutes.

The bill will take effect 15 days after being signed by the president, who indicated on Sunday that the resolution, which he called a "piece of torn paper", would alter Iran's relationship with the IAEA.

The bill stopped short of approving demands by some conservative parliamentarians who wanted a tougher line against the IAEA and an end to inspections of atomic facilities.

Iran's chief nuclear negotiator, Ali Larijani, played down the possibility of Iran adopting tough measures, insisting that Tehran still "wanted to resolve the issue peacefully."

"We do not want to adopt radical behaviours ... our policy is to continue our atomic work based on international laws," the ISNA students news agency quoted Larijani as saying.

Parliament Speaker Gholamali Haddadadel said the bill gave the government authority to decide if it wanted the nuclear standoff to be resolved through political means in the framework of the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT).

"This bill is a warning to the government not to put the fate of Iran totally in the hands of the IAEA and react in proportion with imposed pressures," he said.

"The government's reaction to international pressures could also be pulling out of the NPT," Haddadadel said.

Some analysts disagreed, saying under Iran's system of clerical rule, Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has the last say on state matters, not the president.

"This law does not give any additional power to the government than what it already has ... ," political analyst Saeed Leylaz said.

Khamenei has previously said Iran would not yield to pressure. He has issued a religious decree, saying that making, stockpiling or using nuclear weapons was against Islamic beliefs, the official IRNA news agency reported in August 2005.

However, some politicians say the conservative-dominated parliament wanted to send a message to the world that hardliners in Iran could force the government to adopt a tougher line.

Iran in February ended voluntary implementation of the Additional Protocol to the NPT that allowed for short notice IAEA inspections of its nuclear sites, after being referred to the UN Security Council.

Some hardline commentators have suggested that Iran should pull out of the NPT. "Iran's membership in the NPT is ridiculous now," said Hussein Shariatmadari, chief editor of Kayhan daily.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Iran, Yemen keen to expand mutual ties Tehran
2006-10-11
Choosing up sides is a continuous process in the Muddle East...
Yemeni Ambassador to Tehran Jamal Abdullah al-Solal and Deputy Majlis speaker, Mohammad Reza Bahonar conferred here Tuesday on expansion of bilateral relations. According to a report released by Majlis Media Department, at the meeting Bahonar compared Iran-Yemen ties to bilateral relations between regional states and said that historical and cultural commonalties of the two countries mainly account for their favorable bonds.

"Cooperation between the two states in political and economic fields are currently at an acceptable level, but there are still numerous unused potentials for further broadening of such ties," he added. The MP expressed his satisfaction with the positive trend of cooperation on the international scene and said that strengthening inter-parliamentary ties plays a decisive role in improving the stance of both countries at the global level. For his part, al-Solal pointed to bilateral relations as special and declared the interest of Yemen's high-ranking officials in strengthening ties with Iran in various domains. The Yemeni diplomat called for more extensive collaboration with Iran in economic fields, adding that his country welcomes Iranian investors in Yemen and that bureaucratic obstacles will be eliminated to facilitate such investment.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Iran opens plant that can produce plutonium
2006-08-26
Just days before it is supposed to suspend enrichment of uranium or face the prospect of sanctions, Iran continues to project an image of defiance and confidence. Its position regarding the demand it suspend enrichment remains a determined "No."

On Saturday, President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, made a provocative, if symbolic, gesture by formally inaugurating a heavy-water plant. The plant, which Iranians say is intended for peaceful purposes, would also produce plutonium, which in turn could be used in the building of nuclear warheads. "There are no talks of nuclear weapons in Iran," President Ahmadinejad said as he announced the opening of the plant. "And we are not a threat for any country, even the Zionist regime that is the enemy of the countries in the region."
You don't need plutonium for energy purposes if you're enriching uranium.
But, he added: "We tell the Western countries not to cause trouble for themselves because Iranian people are determined to take big steps."

The action was the latest in a series of not-too-veiled threats against the West if Iran is saddled with sanctions. Iranian's public confidence is based on three primary factors, political analysts here said: There is a strong belief that two of the council's permanent members, Russia and China, will support Iran's call for talks and oppose moving toward sanctions; that the United States is far too bogged down in Iraq and Afghanistan to be willing to spark another conflict in the region; and the perceived victory of Hezbollah in its war with Israel has strengthened Iran's political capital in the region.

"After the defeat of Israel by Hezbollah forces, China and Russia should not want to leave the side that won the war, which is the Islamic world," said Hossein Shariatmadari, who is the editor of the conservative daily newspaper Kayhan.

Just four days earlier, Iranian officials had offered their response to a package of incentives that Western diplomats had hoped would encourage Tehran to voluntarily suspend uranium enrichment. While the details of the response were not released, Shariatmadari, who is was appointed by Iran's supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, said that the package noted 50 "ambiguities" in the original incentives package that needed clarification. Those, he said, included questions as basic as "Who is responsible for implementing the incentives," he said. "The E.U., the U.S., the nuclear agency, who?"

Soon after Iran gave its reply to the incentives package, Iran's public posture reverted back to confrontation. The deputy speaker of parliament, Mohammad Reza Bahonar, cautioned that too much pressure on Iran could lead to calls for a nuclear weapons program. "Our country is confronted with illogical countries who have nuclear weapons," he was quoted as saying in Saturday's edition of the reformist newspaper Shargh. "If they put too much pressure, our people might ask the government to produce nuclear weapons as a deterrent instrument."

On Friday, a mid-level cleric, Ahmad Khatami, said during a Friday prayer ceremony that the West ought to be cautious in the way it addressed Iran. "You can not use the language of force against this nation," Khatami, in a speech broadcast around the nation from central Tehran. "Do not test us as you have tested us before." As is customary, Khatami stood with his right hand gripping the barrel of an automatic weapon as he addressed thousands of people gathered for the weekly prayer ceremony. "You can not deal with a nation as great as the Iranian nation this way. It is a very stupid approach. Russia and China, we count on you to be careful not to fall into the trap American has set for you."

For Iran, the issue of its nuclear program is as much about domestic politics as it is about international relations. President Ahmadinejad was elected last year on a populist economic message, promising a redistribution of the nation's vast oil wealth and immediate economic improvements. Instead, while the economy remains gridlocked, inflation and unemployment high, Ahmadinejad has turned the nuclear issue into his raison d'etre. Focusing on national pride, the president and Ayatollah Khamenei have succeeded in winning public support for the nuclear program.

While the depth of that support could be tested by sanctions, the president continue to appeal to pride as he opened the new heavy-water plant in Arak, south of Tehran. "Having nuclear technology and using it is a blessing and is the right of all nations, including Iran," President Ahmadinejad said in Arak. "As the people's representative, I pursue whatever people want. Today they want to have nuclear technology and I pursue this demand and will not back down."
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
There, He Said It: "Iran Might Produce Nuclear Weapons"
2006-08-26
Tehran, Iran, Aug. 26 – A top Iranian official warned on Friday that Tehran may develop nuclear weapons as a “preventative measure” against threats posed by the West.
In your face, Euros
“The patience of the Iranian nation has a limit. If [the West] crosses this limit, our nation, which is very suspicious of the good will of Western countries, will force Majlis to ratify the law for Iran to withdraw from the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty”, Mohammad-Reza Bahonar, the deputy speaker of Iran’s Majlis, or Parliament, said on Friday.

“The Iranian nation is facing illogical powers that have nuclear weapons and see no deterrent. If they exert pressure on us it is possible that our nation will ask the government to produce nuclear weapons as a preventative measure”, Bahonar, who is also secretary general of the Islamic Association of Engineers, said following a meeting by the group’s leaders.

“The West must accept Iran as a regional power. They cannot ignore this reality. … Illogical pressures over the nuclear issue must end”, he said. His remarks were reported by the government-run news agency ILNA.

Addressing the West, Bahonar said, “You must fear the day that the Iranian people pour into the streets and demonstrate, calling on the government to produce nuclear weapons to counter the threats”.
We've almost got the mobs organized already. We've just got to finish intimidating or jailing or killing any annoying protestors who DON'T want to be fried by y'all.
He issued a stark warning that “any aggression against the Islamic Republic of Iran will be met with a hard reaction by all Muslims across the world”.

Bahonar, a staunch ultra-conservative ally of the Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, wields considerable influence as a key power-broker in the hard-line government. Many of Ahmadinejad’s political appointees as ministers, governors, and senior administrators are Bahonar’s protégés.

The Islamic Association of Engineers is part of the ultra-conservative camp loyal to Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Iran’s religious police planning summer crackdown
2004-06-19
Iran’s religious police will launch a summer crackdown on Western-style coffee shops and women who flout Islamic dress codes, a newspaper reported yesterday. Tehran’s prosecutor announced last month that a campaign against “social corruption” was under way and Tehranis have complained about an increase in raids on parties. “As summer approaches, we have decided to confront corruption at cultural and sports centers, video clubs, and coffee shops... that fail to observe the regulations,” Tehran Police Chief Morteza Talaei was quoted as saying in the Tosea newspaper. Women who wear figure-hugging coats and revealing headscarves risk fines, jail and lashes. Conservative MP Mohammad Reza Bahonar approved of police efforts but warned against taking a tough line.
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