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Iran To Keep Money In Europe Says Nuke Suspension Red Line

International package offers Iran broad incentives: document
Iran would receive benefits in nuclear energy, trade, finance, agriculture and high technology if it halted uranium enrichment as demanded by world powers, according to a document released Tuesday by the US State Department. Among key provisions, Iran was offered support in building "a light water reactor based on state-of-the-art technology" as well as "legally binding" guarantees for nuclear fuel supplies. It will also benefit from support for research and development in nuclear energy "as international confidence is gradually restored" and help in managing its spent fuel and radioactive waste. The package, "updated" from one offered Iran in June 2006, offers support for Iran in "playing an important and constructive role in international affairs." The package also called for moves toward normalizing Iran's trade and economic ties with the rest of the world by helping integrate Tehran into "international structures, including the World Trade Organization." It called for helping Iran become fully self-sufficient "in food through cooperation in modern technology and proposed civilian projects in environmental protection, infrastructure, science and technology. It proposed the possible removal of restrictions on manufacturers exporting aircraft to Iran. The package called for helping Iranians take courses in areas like civil engineering, agriculture and environmental studies. It said it would also help Iran develop capacities to respond to disasters like earthquakes -- which it has suffered from in the past -- and other emergencies.
by Staff Writers
Tehran (AFP) June 17, 2008
Iran is not planning to move assets from European banks, a banking official said on Tuesday, rejecting reports it is making major withdrawals to dodge impending EU sanctions.

"No money from Iranian banks has been transferred out of European banks to Iran or other countries. And it will not be (moved)," the managing director of Bank Mellat, Ali Divandari, was quoted as saying by the Mehr news agency.

"There is no reason for the transfer of this money," said Divandari, whose bank is one of Iran's major state banks.

The United States and European Union are seeking to wrench up the pressure against Tehran in the standoff over its contested nuclear programme by imposing a range of financial measures against the Islamic republic.

Media reports have said Iran has been shifting tens of billions of dollars from the European banks to other institutions, fearing that further sanctions would affect its access to investments.

Divandari however said that the transfer of such assets has not even been discussed.

The European Union is expected soon to approve new financial sanctions against Iran, targeting in particular Bank Melli, another of Iran's biggest state owned banks.

The United States in October imposed sanctions against three of Iran's largest banks -- including Melli and Mellat -- accusing them of financing weapons proliferation.

Those sanctions forbid any financial transactions between a US citizen or private organisation. All assets under US jurisdiction of those targeted were immediately frozen.

The UN Security Council has slapped three sets of sanctions on Iran over its refusal to halt uranium enrichment, a process which can be diverted to develop a nuclear bomb. Iran has denied it seeks nuclear weapons.

earlier related report
Iran insists nuclear suspension a 'red line'
Iran on Tuesday insisted any demands it should suspend sensitive atomic activities would cross its "red line", days after world powers submitted a new package aimed at ending the nuclear standoff.

"We have said several times that uranium enrichment is Iran's red line and we must have this technology," Deputy Foreign Minister Ali Reza Sheikh Attar said, quoted by the state IRNA news agency.

Suspending uranium enrichment -- which the West fears could be used to make a nuclear weapon -- is the key demand in the deal offered Saturday to Tehran by EU foreign policy chief Javier Solana on behalf of world powers.

The package offers Iran talks on a package of technological and economic incentives, so long as Tehran suspends uranium enrichment.

Sheikh Attar said Iran will give the offer "an expert examination and respond as soon as possible."

The West has said its policy in seeking to end the standoff combines diplomacy with tough financial sanctions, with the European Union and United States having already imposed a wave of measures against Iran.

British Prime Minister Gordon Brown said on Monday that the EU was to agree new sanctions, including freezing the assets of a major Iranian bank, although the bloc has yet to give the final go-ahead for the measures.

Iranian foreign ministry spokesman Mohammad Ali Hosseini responded: "People and officials in our country are watchful of the other side's decisions. If they take a decision against Iran, we have options against it."

Diplomats said the EU did not agree the sanctions immediately in order to avoid unbalancing the situation and give Tehran time to consider the proposal presented by Solana.

Meanwhile, a banking official said Iran is not planning to move assets from European banks, rejecting reports it is making major withdrawals to dodge impending EU sanctions.

"No money from Iranian banks has been transferred out of European banks to Iran or other countries. And it will not be (moved)," the managing director of Bank Mellat, Ali Divandari, was quoted as saying by the Mehr news agency.

"There is no reason for the transfer of this money," said Divandari, whose bank is one of Iran's major state banks.

Several Iranian and foreign newspapers have reported that President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad ordered the transfer of billions of dollars in Iranian assets from Europe to Asia to circumvent the sanctions.

Iran, OPEC's number two producer, vehemently rejects Western allegations it is seeking nuclear weapons, saying it only wants electricity for a growing population whose fossil fuels will eventually run out.

The International Atomic Energy Agency has been investigating the nuclear drive for over five years but has never been able to conclude whether the programme is peaceful.

Even as Solana delivered the offer on Saturday, Iran's government spokesman announced that Tehran would reject any package that does not allow it to enrich uranium.

US President George W. Bush said this was tantamount to rejecting the package but both Iran and the EU have insisted the deal is still being studied.

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No EU decision on Iran bank sanctions Monday: Solana
Luxembourg (AFP) June 16, 2008
EU nations postponed a decision on Monday about imposing new sanctions on Iran, said EU foreign policy chief Javier Solana, contradicting remarks from a senior US official.







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