Search blog.co.uk

Headline News...EastKurd
Posts archive for: 29 September, 2008
  • IAEA head urges Iran to end nuclear secrecy

    By GEORGE JAHN

    ImageVIENNA, Austria (AP) — A six-year probe has not ruled out the possibility that Iran may be running clandestine nuclear programs, the chief U.N nuclear inspector said Monday, urging the country to end its secretive ways.

    Europe also urged Iran to fully cooperate with a U.N probe that is trying to assess its past and current nuclear activities. An EU statement at the opening session of the International Atomic Energy Agency's 145-nation conference declared: "The international community cannot accept the prospect of Iran acquiring nuclear weapons."

    Iran and ally Syria are among four nations seeking their region's nomination for a seat on the IAEA's decision-making 35-nation board.

    Iran is running to counteract a U.S. push to have Afghanistan or outsider Kazakhstan elected over Syria, which is under IAEA investigation for allegedly hiding a secret nuclear program, including a nearly completed plutonium producing reactor destroyed last year by Israel.

    If the regional group does not agree on a candidate by the time the conference turns to the issue, there will likely be a vote — an unusual turn because these meetings normally decide by consensus.

    But chief U.N nuclear inspector Mohamed ElBaradei, the head of the IAEA, focused on more overriding nuclear concerns about Iran — its refusal to suspend uranium enrichment and alleged past plans to develop the bomb.

    On Saturday, the U.N. Security Council approved a resolution critical of Iran's defiance on uranium enrichment, which can create both nuclear fuel and the fissile core of warheads.

    Urging it to "implement all transparency measures ... required to build confidence in the exclusively peaceful nature of its nuclear program," ElBaradei declared: "This will be good for Iran, good for the Middle East region and good for the world."

    He also warned the session that his organization is increasingly stretched in trying to carry out responsibilities that include nonproliferation and preventing terrorists from acquiring the bomb.

    "All is not well with the IAEA," ElBaradei declared, appealing for more money and authority for his agency.

    Speaking for the EU, Luc Chatel of France called on Iran to "open the doors of its facilities, to give access to persons and documents, and to answer all the questions posed by (IAEA) inspectors."

    The annual meeting allows the agency's member countries to set policies that range from strengthening nonproliferation to carrying medical and scientific research. But tensions between Islamic members and the West threaten to hamper decision-making.

    A tradition of consensus, has normally led all sides to bridge sometimes substantial differences and opt for compromise for most of the conference's 52-year history. A vote on any topic is unusual and considered a huge dent in the meeting's credibility.

    But frustration among Muslim countries over Israel's refusal to put its nuclear program under international purview, and resistance from the Jewish state to Muslim pressure on the issue, threatens to force a vote for the third year running.

    As in the past two years, Muslim IAEA members are expected to put forward a resolution urging all Mideast nations to refrain from testing or developing nuclear arms and urging nuclear weapons states "to refrain from any action" hindering a Mideast nuclear-free zone.

    After losing the vote two consecutive years, Islamic nations are threatening to up the ante this year, warning they will call for a ballot on every item, no matter how uncontroversial, unless they get conference backing on the Israeli nuclear issue.

    Arab members — backed by Iran — this year have again asked conference organizers to include an item on Israel, this time labeled "Israeli Nuclear Capabilities" instead of "Nuclear Threat," as in previous years. That is being protested by Israel.

    Focusing on Israel by name "is substantially unwarranted and flawed," said a letter prepared for review by the conference from Israel Michaeli, the Jewish state's IAEA representative.

    Sponsors of the item should instead "address the most pressing proliferation concerns in the Middle East," the letter said, an allusion to Iran.

  • Iran's Kamkars perform in London

    kamkars
    The Barbican Center has held a Kurdish music concert by the prominent Iranian Kamkars music ensemble in the British capital of London, PressTV reported.

    The event was held as a part of Barbican's Ramadan Nights festival, which featured music pieces from various Muslim countries.

    The Kamkars presented intricate and beautiful arrangements of traditional folk songs on Sep. 27, 2008 at Barbican Hall.

    A Kurdish family of virtuosic vocalists and instrumentalists, the Kamkars are among Iran's leading musical ensembles which perform traditional Kurdish and Persian music.

  • Iran: Haft-Tapeh Sugar Cane factory workers on strike

    NCRI – Workers in Haft-Tapeh Sugar Cane factory went on strike again on Wednesday.

    Some 1,500 workers of different parts of the industrial complex walked out including those in logistics, engineering, services and maintenance, mechanical work shops and administration. The factory with more than 5,000 employees has been virtually shutdown over payment dispute with the government appointed management most of this year. The factory owes the workers at least six months of salaries and benefits.

    Thousands of workers in Haft-Tapeh, Pars, Ahwaz Rolling and Pipes and many more have been on strike.
    Workers as the most vulnerable part of the Iranian labor force have faced great difficulties receiving their salaries. Managements in most of the factories which were owned previously by the government have been turned over to the relatives and friends of the ruling mullahs with a fraction of their actual values. The managers with no real experience in running industrial units and keen in pocketing what revenues the factories may have are turning the screws on the workers not paying the salaries for months and cutting their benefits in particular health insurance.

KURDISH FLAG
Qazi Mohammad
Dr Abdul Rahman Qassemlou
Dr Sadeq Sharafkandi
Foad Mostafa Soltani
Mohammad Sadiq Kaboudvand
Contact us On:eastkurd{at}gmail.com

Human Right Watch
Amnesty International
Reporter Without Border
Calendar
<< < September 2008 > >>
Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa Su
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
8 9 10 11 12 13 14
15 16 17 18 19 20 21
22 23 24 25 26 27 28
29 30
Translate page
TopOfBlogs News Only Political Blogs - BlogCatalog Blog Directory Subscribe in NewsGator Online TheBlogGallery – The Blog Directory Wikio EastKurd kurdish blog at Blogged Share/Save/Bookmark Subscribe to me on FriendFeed
Powered by EastKurd
کــــــــــــــــــــوردشــــــــــــرق

Footer:

The content of this website belongs to a private person, blog.co.uk is not responsible for the content of this website.