Students Shana Vernon, second right, and Mari Mordfin, right, of Yeshivat Rambam, a Jewish school in Baltimore, hold posters during an anti-nukes rally on September 24, 2009 in Washington, DC.
Students Shana Vernon, second right, and Mari Mordfin, right, of Yeshivat Rambam, a Jewish school in Baltimore, hold posters during an anti-nukes rally on September 24, 2009 in Washington, DC.

Iran has second enrichment plant



VIENNA // Iran has told the UN nuclear agency that it is running a new, previously undeclared, facility to enrich uranium, officials said today. Iran is under three sets of UN Security Council sanctions for refusing to freeze enrichment. Officials said that Iran revealed the existence of a second enrichment plant in a letter sent on Monday to International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) chief Mohamed ElBaradei.

It had previously said it was operating only one plant, which is being monitored by the IAEA. The Islamic Republic insists that it has the right to the activity to generate fuel for what it says will be a nationwide chain of nuclear reactors. But because enrichment can make both nuclear fuel and weapons-grade uranium, the international community fears Tehran will use the technology to generate the fissile material used on the tip of nuclear warheads.

The revelation further burdens the chances of progress in scheduled talks between Iran and six world powers on October 1. At that planned meeting - the first in more than a year - the five permanent UN Security Council members and Germany will be pressing Iran to scale back on its enrichment activities. But Tehran has declared that it will not bargain on enrichment. The officials said that the letter contained no details about the location of the second facility, when it had started operations or the type and number of centrifuges it was running. The government officials - one speaking from his European capital outside Vienna, the other a diplomat in Vienna from a country accredited to the IAEA - spoke anonymously. One said he had seen the letter. The other said that he had been informed about it by a UN official who had seen it.

While Iran's mainstay P-1 centrifuge is a decades-old model based on Chinese technology, it has begun experimenting with state-of-the art prototypes that enrich more quickly and efficiently than its old model. UN officials familiar with the IAEA's attempts to monitor and probe Iran's nuclear activities have previously said that they suspected Iran might be running undeclared enrichment plants. The existence of a secret Iranian enrichment programme built on black market technology was revealed seven years ago. Since then the country has continued to expand the programme with only a few interruptions as it works toward its aspirations of a 50,000-centrifuge enrichment facility at the southern city of Natanz. The last IAEA report on Iran in August said Iran had set up more than 8,000 centrifuges to churn out enriched uranium at the cavernous underground Natanz facility, although the report said that only about 4,600 of those were fully active.

*AP

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UAE tour of the Netherlands

UAE squad: Rohan Mustafa (captain), Shaiman Anwar, Ghulam Shabber, Mohammed Qasim, Rameez Shahzad, Mohammed Usman, Adnan Mufti, Chirag Suri, Ahmed Raza, Imran Haider, Mohammed Naveed, Amjad Javed, Zahoor Khan, Qadeer Ahmed
Fixtures:
Monday, 1st 50-over match
Wednesday, 2nd 50-over match
Thursday, 3rd 50-over match