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In the Bill of Human Rights of Cyrus the Great, we read:Freedom and tolerance of thought, speech, religion; choice of place of residence, coming and going, jobs and professions, will be on equal terms and conditions for everyone.No inquiry, injustice or harassment is allowed to be done to anyone.In this way Cyrus says that I have sown the seed of amity, friendship and affection among nations and have granted the people peace of mind, security, tranquility and comfort. From Cyrus the Great, King of Iran, sixth century B.C. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bGRwzAlQbXE&feature=related toxic skies 10 PARTS EVERY ONE MUST SEE PASS IT ON. http://www.blogtalkradio.com/EAGELS-OF-USA1- The alternative 'Patriot' news world is thoroughly penetrated and controlled by agents and operatives... from talk shows and net sites, to documentary producers and columnists. Beware
Date / Time: 10/6/2009 10:05 PM UTC
TEHRAN (Reuters) - Iran plans to use a new generation of faster centrifuges to enrich uranium at a newly-revealed nuclear site, its atomic energy chief said in remarks published Tuesday.
The underground enrichment plant near the holy Shi'ite city of Qom was kept secret until Iran disclosed its existence last month. Diplomats say it did so after learning Western intelligence services had discovered the site.
In Geneva on October 1 Iran agreed with six world powers -- the United States, Russia, China, Britain, France and Germany -- to allow U.N. International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) inspectors access to the site. Follow-up talks are due in late October.
"We have put our effort on research and development of new machines in the past two or three months so that we would be able to produce machines with high efficiency and completely indigenous," Ali Akbar Salehi, the head of Iran's Atomic Energy Organization, was quoted as saying by the newspaper Kayhan.
"We are hopeful of using a new generation of centrifuges at the (Qom-area) Fordu site," he said. Kayhan published a transcript of a state television interview with Salehi.
Nuclear experts believe the new model of centrifuge is capable of doubling or tripling the output rate.
IAEA director Mohammed ElBaradei secured a deal with Iran on Sunday to let inspectors visit it on October 25. The plant under construction would be Iran's second uranium-enrichment site, after a larger one under IAEA surveillance near Natanz.
The West suspects the Islamic state is covertly seeking to develop nuclear weapons. Iran denies this but has refused to curb the program or allow unfettered IAEA inspections needed to verify it is for peaceful purposes only.
Last Thursday's talks are expected to win Iran a reprieve from tougher U.N. sanctions in the near future.
TRANSPARENCY PLEDGES
However, the prospect could arise again if Iran does not, in coming talks, go beyond the limited nuclear transparency pledges agreed in Geneva and instead tries to string out dialogue to buy time to develop possible atomic bomb capability.
A senior aide to French President Nicolas Sarkozy was quoted as saying Tuesday that if the talks failed, tough economic sanctions would be needed to prevent war in the region.
"If the negotiations lead to nothing, we have to do everything to avoid a war, notably any attack decided on by the Israelis," Claude Gueant, the president's chief of staff, told Le Figaro newspaper in comments released ahead of publication.
Enriched uranium can be used to fuel nuclear power plants and, if refined much further, provide material for atomic bombs.
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