Nov 26, 2009, 16:38 GMT
Vienna - Pressure mounted on Iran Thursday at a meeting of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) in Vienna, with six world powers aiming for a resolution that would censure Tehran for secretly building a new nuclear site.
As the 12-year tenure of IAEA chief Mohamed ElBaradei comes to a close on Monday, the dispute over Iran's nuclear programme showed no sign of abating and the country continued to refuse to disclose the truth about alleged nuclear weapons projects.
'We have effectively reached a dead end, unless Iran engages fully with us,' ElBaradei told the IAEA's Board of Governors.
But the focus of the resolution drafted by the permanent UN Security Council members Britain, China, France, Russia and the United States, as well as Germany, was Iran's new enrichment plant at Fordu, near the city of Qom.
'It is a major issue which again gives rise to serious questions and concerns regarding the nature of Iran's nuclear programme,' said German Ambassador Ruediger Luedeking.
The draft resolution - to be voted on Friday - urged Iran to halt construction at Fordu immediately and said the country was 'in breach of its obligation to suspend all enrichment related activities' as decided by the Security Council.
A Western diplomat said around 20 of the 35 countries on the board are supporting the text that expresses 'serious concern' about the site near the city of Qom, which Tehran informed the IAEA about only in September, at least two years after construction began.
If the resolution is adopted it will be transmitted to the Security Council.
'It is a political signal,' a European diplomat said, referring to statements from the US and Western countries that they would start mulling further sanctions in January if Tehran did not come around in the nuclear stand-off.
Iran's ambassador to the IAEA issued a vague warning against adopting the resolution, which would be the first time the board has taken action on Iran since 2006.
'We are determined to continuous cooperation with the IAEA. Any gesture or move jeopardizing this spirit of technical cooperation in Vienna will be counterproductive,' Ambassador Ali Asghar Soltanieh told reporters.
Patience among world powers and at the IAEA was also running out because Iran had still not formally responded to a proposed multinational deal aimed at reducing tensions over the country's nuclear programme.
ElBaradei said he was 'disappointed' that Tehran had not responded to his draft agreement, under which Iran would ship out most of its stock of low-enriched uranium, in return for nuclear fuel made in Russia and France which would be used for a medical-purpose reactor in Tehran.
From December, former Japanese diplomat Yukiya Amano is to succeed ElBaradei.
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