Latest News

UN nuclear watchdog returns to Iran but no agreement yet on inspections

UN nuclear watchdog returns to Iran but no agreement yet on inspections

Iranian state media reported that UN nuclear inspectors returned to Iran on Wednesday for the first since the country suspended its cooperation with them following Israel's attack on its nuclear sites.

The ICANA news agency reported that Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi said Tehran still had not reached an accord on how to resume full cooperation with UN IAEA monitors.

According to the report, he stated that inspectors would oversee the changing of fuel in Iran's Bushehr Nuclear Power Plant.

Araqchi made his comments a day after Iran held a meeting with France, Britain and Germany in an attempt to

revive negotiations

Over its nuclear program - which Western countries say is aimed at the development of a bomb but which it claims is focused on civil projects.

Iran said that it needed a new agreement of cooperation with the International Atomic Energy Agency following the 12-day war with Israel in June, to which the United States joined shortly after.

The Iranian Parliament

Passed legislation

In June, the Supreme National Security Council of Iran ruled that future inspections would require approval from Tehran.

According to ICANA, the Council approved the inspection visit. However, "no draft of a new modality for cooperation with the IAEA" has been finalised.

He added that "the changing of fuel in Bushehr's nuclear reactor must be done under the inspection of inspectors from the international agency."

IAEA chief Rafael Grossi said to Fox News on February 2 that "the first IAEA inspection team is back in Iran," and that the agency had yet to decide how it would resume its inspections.

After the June attacks on the Iranian sites, Iran claimed that the sites were not safe for inspection. (Reporting and editing by Toby Chopra; Elwely Elwelly)

(source: Reuters)