Iran awaits swift response to nuclear deal
Iran expects a speedy response from planet powers on an accord to ship considerably of its low enriched uranium to Turkey as part of a nuclear fuel swap option, the foreign ministry said on Tuesday.
Iran will notify the Global Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) of the accord signed on Monday with Turkey and Brazil "in writing, through the common channels, within a week," foreign ministry spokesman Ramin Mehmanparast claimed.
"We expect to have members of the Vienna group (the United States, France, Russia and the IAEA) to swiftly announce their readiness" to implement the fuel swap, he told reporters.
The IAEA proclaimed it has acquired the text of the joint declaration by Iran, Brazil and Turkey but was now ready for Tehran to notify it straight of what commitments it had undertaken.
"We are now expecting created notification from Iran that it agrees with the related provisions enclosed in the declaration," IAEA spokeswoman Gill Tudor claimed on Monday.
The so-known as Vienna Party created an supply final October to ship most of Iran's LEU out of the region in return for better grade reactor fuel to be supplied by Russia and France.
Iran stalled on the package insisting it wants a simultaneous swap on its own soil, which was rejected by globe powers.
Monday's accord signed in Tehran commits Iran to deposit 1,200 kilograms (two,640 pounds) of small enriched uranium (LEU) in Turkey in return for fuel for a Tehran study reactor.
Mehmanparast stated if the Islamic republic reaches agreement with the countries engaged in the first IAEA-backed work, it "will pave the way for a lot more nuclear cooperation."
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