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EU, US condemn Iran on human rights as nuclear threat looms

Published 09 February 2010
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The United States and the European Union expressed concern yesterday (8 February) about the potential for a renewed crackdown by the Iranian government around the 11 February anniversary of the founding of the Islamic Republic, as Teheran informed the UN nuclear watchdog it will start producing 20%-enriched uranium inside the country.

Washington and Brussels issued an unexpected joint statement on Iran, warning the country's leaders to live up to their international human rights obligations.

"We are particularly concerned by the potential for further violence and repression during the coming days, especially around the anniversary of the Islamic Republic's founding on 11 February," they said.

The Iranian opposition is expected to revive anti-government protests around the anniversary, raising the prospect of new clashes with the security forces.

Opposition supporters and security forces have clashed repeatedly since President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad won disputed elections in June. Many protesters have been rounded up and put on trial.

"The large-scale detentions and mass trials, the threatened execution of protesters, the intimidation of family members of those detained and the continuing denial to its citizens of the right to peaceful expression are contrary to human rights norms," the EU-US statement said.

"We call on the Government of Iran to live up to its international human rights obligations, to end its abuses against its own people, to hold accountable those who have committed the abuses and to release those who are exercising their rights."

Meanwhile, Iran notified the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), the UN nuclear watchdog, it planned to produce 20%-enriched uranium inside the country, angering Western powers.

The French and US defence ministers jointly announced later in Paris that the two countries would work together for new sanctions against Iran over the nuclear issue.

Robert Gates, US secretary of defence, said, "if the international community will stand together and bring pressure to bear on the Iranian government, I believe there is still time for sanctions and pressure to work".

Karl Theodor Zu Guttenberg, German defence minister, said, "those involved, especially on the Iranian side, should really think whether they want to reach a solution, and whether they should, which will have a positive effect on the country. The UN Security Council is responsible for international security and should observe this responsibility, and from that the necessary steps should follow."

On 7 February, Italy and the United States vowed to cooperate in raising international pressure on Iran to halt its nuclear enrichment programme. But defence ministers dismissed the possibility of military intervention in Iran.

(EurActiv with Reuters.)

Background: 

Last June, the presidential election in the Islamic republic of Iran unveiled deep societal divisions between conservatives and reformists of Mir Hossein Mousavi. 

Since then, violent demonstrations have shaken the country. During the latest protest, the government seemed readier to kill its opponents, with Teheran confirming that on 28 December, 15 people were killed. One of the victims was a nephew of Mir Hossein Mousavi.

Meanwhile, the world is losing patience with Iran's nuclear programme. The West had proposed a deal whereby Iran would send uranium abroad for further enrichment to feed some of its reactors for medical purposes, but the government missed an end-2009 deadline for doing so.

By diminishing Iran's stockpile, the deal could have opened the door to confidence-building talks with the six countries trying to talk Iran out of its nucelar ambitions - the United States, Britain, France, Germany, Russia and China.

The stakes are high as the issue is a severe test of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), which is up for review this year. If Iran persistently breaks the treaty's rules with impunity, the NPT will be discredited. Harsher measures seem inevitable. There are only two options for the six countries: tougher sanctions or military action, analysts argue.

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