RIVAL Iranian
and UK delegations are visiting SA in a bid to win support two weeks
ahead of an emergency session on Iran and its nuclear programme by the
United Nations (UN) nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic Energy
Agency (IAEA). Jonathan Katzenellenbogen
Yesterday Iranian Deputy Foreign
Minister Mehdi Mostafavi held talks in Pretoria with Deputy Foreign
Minister Aziz Pahad and Abdul Minty, SA’s representative on the IAEA
board.
Earlier in the day a senior British diplomat, John
Sawers, who has negotiated directly with the Iranians along with the
French and Germans as part of the European Union Three, (EU-3), held
separate talks at the foreign affairs department.
The IAEA board will meet in Vienna on February 2 to
decide whether to refer Tehran to the UN Security Council following
Iran’s decision to break IAEA seals at its Natanz nuclear enrichment
facility and resume its research programme.
Some countries fear that this is a step towards Iran developing nuclear weapons.
Referral to the council for discussion is an implicit act
of criticism. The council could also authorise sanctions, although this
would require co-operation from China, which often shows a reluctance
to interfere in the “internal matters” of countries.
The EU-3 has committed itself to a diplomatic resolution in the standoff with Iran and has not yet advocated UN sanctions.
However, the EU-3 and the US want Iran to be referred to the UN Security Council.
Sawers and his counterparts from Germany and France are
visiting other countries that make up the 35-member IAEA board ahead of
the meeting to lobby for their position.
Late last year the US urged SA to speak out against Iran’s nuclear programme in order to isolate Tehran.
While SA only has one vote on the board, it is an
influential member of the nonaligned group on the IAEA board, which
tends to vote as a bloc.
SA’s influence is a result of it being the only nuclear power to have disarmed.
Last September the board voted to condemn Iran for its
nuclear programme, but SA along with other nonaligned countries, except
for India, abstained.
There has been no indication from Pretoria on which way SA will vote on February 2.
Journalists were prevented from asking questions ahead of the meeting between Pahad and Mostafavi at the Union Buildings.
After the meeting, SA appealed in a statement “to all
parties involved to refrain from any action that could further increase
tension”.
SA denies it has proposed a resolution to end the
standoff. However, what has become known as the “South African
proposal” involves SA selling Iran uranium-derived yellow cake, which
would then be processed into the feedstock gas for enrichment by Iran.
This would then be stored by SA, to prevent the enrichment of
weapons-grade material. The US opposes any enrichment activity by Iran.
SA has also backed a Moscow proposal to allow Tehran to conduct its enrichment activities in Russia.
SA maintains that countries that do not possess nuclear
weapons have the right to enrich their own uranium in accordance with
the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.
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