Begin typing your search above and press return to search.
exit_to_app
Campuses paralysed by chancellor raj
access_time 2025-07-05T17:16:31+05:30
Can we still say Keralas healthcare is superb?
access_time 2025-07-04T10:00:55+05:30
The era of hit and run is over!
access_time 2025-07-03T14:18:09+05:30
Supreme Courts laudable reservation decision
access_time 2025-07-03T12:47:16+05:30
You too, Tharoor!
access_time 2025-07-02T12:11:10+05:30
DEEP READ
Ukraine
access_time 2023-08-16T11:16:47+05:30
Espionage in the UK
access_time 2025-06-13T22:20:13+05:30
Yet another air tragedy
access_time 2025-06-13T09:45:02+05:30
The Russian plan: Invade Japan and South Korea
access_time 2025-01-16T15:32:24+05:30
exit_to_app
Homechevron_rightWorldchevron_rightIran to suspend...

Iran to suspend Tehran's cooperation with UN nuclear watchdog IAEA

text_fields
bookmark_border
Iran to suspend Tehrans cooperation with UN nuclear watchdog IAEA
cancel

Tehran: Iran's Parliament Speaker, Mohammad-Bagher Ghalibaf, said the legislature is preparing to approve a plan to halt Tehran's cooperation with the United Nations nuclear watchdog as tensions with the US and Israel rise.

In a post on social media platform X, Ghalibaf accused the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) of lacking "professional" conduct following recent attacks on Iranian nuclear sites, Xinhua news agency reported.

"We in the Islamic Consultative Assembly are seeking to approve a plan to halt cooperation with the agency until we receive concrete guarantees of its professional behavior," Ghalibaf said.

The announcement comes after a series of strikes on Iran's nuclear and military infrastructure. On June 13, Israeli airstrikes targeted multiple sites inside Iran, including nuclear and military installations, killing several senior commanders, nuclear scientists, and civilians.

The United States followed on early Sunday with airstrikes on Iran's Fordow, Natanz, and Isfahan nuclear facilities.

The flare-up coincides with a recent resolution by the IAEA's Board of Governors, which, for the first time since 2005, declared Iran non-compliant with its nuclear obligations.

The move followed an IAEA report accusing Tehran of failing to fully explain the presence of nuclear material detected at three undeclared locations while offering what the agency described as "less than satisfactory" cooperation.

Earlier on Monday, the Director General of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), Rafael Grossi revealed that extensive destruction is expected to have occurred in Iran's nuclear sites following the US attacks.

Addressing the Board of Governors at an emergency meeting regarding the situation in Iran, the IAEA chief highlighted that craters are visible at the Fordow nuclear site in Iran.


With inputs from IANS

Show Full Article
TAGS:iran war IAEA 
Next Story