Iran ready to 'pay price' over nukes

Tuesday, June 5, 2007

SUPREME leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei yesterday warned that Iran was prepared "to pay a price" and "resist" to realise the aims of its contested nuclear programme amid an intensifying standoff with the West.

In a speech marking the 18th anniversary of the death of Iran's revolutionary founder Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, Khamenei signalled Tehran has no intention of caving in to the key Western demands on its atomic drive.

"The only way for a nation to realise its rights is vigilant resistance. They should be alert, recognise their rights and insist on it," Khamenei told thousands packed into Khomeini's shrine in the southern outskirts of Tehran.

"A nation that wants to reach independence must pay a price. If it wants to preserve its rights against bullies, then it has to pay a price," said Khamenei to chants of "nuclear energy is our natural right" and "death to America".

"It cannot sit in a corner and expect development and progress," he added.

Khamenei's speech comes at a crucial moment in the crisis over Iran's nuclear programme, with the United States and Western powers pushing for a third set of UN sanctions to punish Tehran for its nuclear defiance.

Iran has infuriated the West by refusing to suspend uranium enrichment, a process Europe and the United States fear could be used to make nuclear weapons and want Tehran to suspend immediately.

Iran has repeatedly said it has no intention of suspending enrichment and is instead working on expanding the programme by installing hundreds of centrifuges at an underground plant in the central city of Natanz.

Talks between EU foreign policy chief Javier Solana and Iranian chief nuclear negotiator Ali Larijani last week ended without any breakthrough with both sides seemingly sticking defiantly to their positions.

US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice has said that the "only question" worth discussing was whether Iran was prepared to suspend uranium enrichment.

Seated on a platform above the crowds of faithful jostling beneath, a defiant Khamenei scoffed at the notion of Iran "begging" to Western powers to allow its nuclear drive to continue.

AFP