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Paris (AFP) Dec 7, 2010 A former Iranian diplomat who defected to the West said Tuesday he had regularly seen North Korean technicians at Tehran airport between 2002 and 2007. Western intelligence agencies suspect North Korea may be helping Iran to develop long-range ballistic missiles and nuclear weapons technology. Tehran insists it simply wants to develop civilian nuclear power. Mohammed Reza Heydari, Iran's former consul general in Norway, defected amid protests in his homeland over Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's disputed re-election. Norway granted him asylum in February. On Tuesday he told reporters at a meeting organised by the Paris-based thinktank the Centre of Political and Foreign Affairs that he had seen North Koreans when he had been a foreign ministry official at Tehran airport. "I saw them with my own eyes," he said. "They were treated in a very discreet manner, in order to pass through without being seen." Heydari said he was "100 percent certain" that these contacts continue and alleged he had spoken to members of Iran's hardline Revolutionary Guards Corps who confirmed that Iran plans to build a bomb. "I was able to confirm that Iran has two goals -- to develop the range of its ground-to-ground missiles and to obtain a nuclear weapon with the help of North Korea," he said. Since defecting, Heydari has sought to convince more Iranian diplomats to abandon the regime and form an opposition movement in exile. Describing his view of the political scene back in Tehran, Heydari said a group of conservatives around the speaker of parliament Ali Larijani were increasingly opposed to a more religious faction backing Ahmadinejad. According to the defector, while Larijani's group wants to govern Iran, Ahmadinejad's supporters have a more "global agenda" and are awaiting the return of the "hidden imam". Some Shiite Muslims believe that the 12th Imam, known as the Mahdi, who disappeared in the year 874, will return to bring justice to the world. Heydari said Ahmadinejad's faction is pushing Iran's nuclear agenda. "According to our information, this inner circle believes that with only two bombs they can ensure the survival of the country and of Islam," he said. Iranian officials met representatives of the six world powers that act as a contact group on the nuclear standoff on Tuesday, and agreed to meet again in Istanbul next month.
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![]() ![]() Geneva (AFP) Dec 6, 2010 Iran and world powers will hold talks on their deepening standoff over the Iranian nuclear programme for the first time in 14 months on Monday with Tehran claiming it has strengthened its hand. Iran raised the stakes on Sunday when it revealed that it had mined and produced its first home-grown batch of uranium yellowcake - the raw material for enrichment - instead of seeking to import new ... read more |
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