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Washington (AFP) Aug 01, 2007 The US House of Representatives on Tuesday overwhelmingly passed a bill designed to tighten the US vise on Iran, targeting investors in the Islamic Republic's key energy sector. Lawmakers are angry over what they say is Iran's drive for nuclear weapons and alleged role in international terrorism, and vowed to choke off its attempt to procure vitally-needed foreign funds. The bill, which passed by a huge 408-6 majority, requires the naming of foreign companies with more than 20 million dollars in Iran's energy sector, and paves the way for US federal and state pension funds to divest from such firms. It also offers protection for investment managers who siphon money out of the sector and place it elsewhere. The measure was similar to a bill which passed 418-1 earlier Tuesday, aiming to promote divestment from firms that do business in Sudan, in what backers said was the shadow of Darfur "genocide." The United States already has in place a slew of economic sanctions on Iran dating from the 1979 Islamic revolution. If the latest measures become law, they could only be cancelled if a US president certifies Iran has no links to international terrorism, or has halted development of nuclear, chemical and biological weapons and ballistic missiles. The United Nations has also toughened sanctions on Iran to punish its refusal to halt uranium enrichment, which the West suspects is aimed at building a nuclear bomb. Tehran denies the charge. "The purpose of (of the bill) is to change the behavior of multi-national corporations and so change the behavior of Iran's government," said Democratic representative Brad Sherman, of California. Democratic presidential hopeful Barack Obama has introduced a similar bill in the Senate encouraging investors to cash out of projects that benefit Iran. In the absence of US energy giants, European and Japanese companies have profited from exploration and distribution of oil and natural gas from Iran.
Source: Agence France-Presse Related Links Nuclear Power News - Nuclear Science, Nuclear Technology Powering The World in the 21st Century at Energy-Daily.com
![]() ![]() UN inspectors on Monday examined the world's largest nuclear plant in Japan, which leaked a small amount of radiation last month following a powerful earthquake. Tokyo invited the team from the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) in a bid to dispel concerns at home and overseas about risks posed by the Kashiwazaki-Kariwa plant. The IAEA team started the visit just as Japan was mourning the dead on the 62nd anniversary of the world's first atomic attack in Hiroshima, which has made the nation especially sensitive to the use of nuclear technology. |
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