Tehran Says No Decision Made On Whether to Delete IAEA Camera Data

By Staff, Agencies
Iran has not made a decision yet about whether to extend an agreement with the Intewrnational Atomic Energy Agency [IAEA] over access to surveillance footage at its nuclear sites, Foreign Ministry Spokesman Saeed Khatibzadeh said Monday.
The remarks came after a three-month deal between Tehran and international nuclear inspectors to preserve video data at the country’s atomic installations expired last week, following a one-month extension.
“No decision, either negative or positive has been made,” Khatibzadeh told reporters. “Neither the continuation of the deal nor the erasure [of data]. We are in the previous position for the time being.”
Iran began limiting the access of UN atomic watchdog inspectors to its nuclear sites earlier this year to pressure the West over its 2015 nuclear deal with world powers.
Tehran was trying to push European powers to provide relief from oil and banking sanctions imposed three years ago when then-President Donald Trump withdrew America from the landmark accord. As part of that effort, Iran abandoned the accord’s enrichment limits and is now enriching uranium to 60 percent purity, its highest ever levels, although still short of weapons grade 90 percent.
In order to limit diplomatic damage amid ongoing negotiations in Vienna to resurrect the nuclear deal, Iran and the International Atomic Energy Agency reached a last-minute February agreement over Tehran’s newly imposed limits on inspections. Iran promised to save the video data for later access — but only for three months, after which authorities threatened to delete the tapes.
Elsewhere in his remarks, Khatibzadeh said the arrival of a new administration would not affect negotiations in Vienna.
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