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Iran `Hiding Truth’ About Nuclear Work, Will Be on G-8 Agenda, Cannon Says

Posted by Zand-Bon on Jul 30th, 2010 and filed under INTERNATIONAL NEWS FOCUS, News, Photos. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0. You can leave a response or trackback to this entry

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By Greg Quinn

Source:
July 30, 2010

Lawrence Cannon, Canada's foreign affairs minister, listens during an interview in Ottawa. Photographer: Patrick Doyle/Bloomberg

Canada’s foreign minister, , said Iran is “hiding” the truth about its nuclear program and added Group of Eight officials will review the effectiveness of new sanctions when they next meet in September.

Cannon, who presides over meetings of G-8 foreign ministers this year, led a March summit where he helped push for sanctions against Iran that were imposed this week by Canada and the European Union, and earlier by the U.S. Iran has denied allegations from the U.S. and some of its allies that the nuclear program may be intended for weapons development.

Lawrence Cannon, Canada's foreign affairs minister, speaks during an interview in Ottawa. Photographer: Patrick Doyle/Bloomberg

Iran “must allow unfettered access to the inspectors and must make sure that it doesn’t develop a nuclear capacity other than for peaceful purposes,” Cannon said in an interview today in Bloomberg’s Ottawa office. “For the last 20 years Iran has indeed been hiding the truth from everybody.”

Canada and EU governments this week imposed their toughest sanctions yet on Iran, backing U.S. efforts to force the clerical regime to halt uranium enrichment and stop any pursuit of a nuclear weapons capability.

“We will analyze how these sanctions are holding,” Cannon said.

The package includes a ban on new investment in or equipment sales to Iran’s oil and natural-gas industries, restrictions on export-credit guarantees and insurance, and closer monitoring of banks doing business with Iran.

The United Nations Security Council imposed a fourth round of restrictions on Iran in June, while President on July 1 expanded U.S. measures targeting Iranian gasoline imports and banking access. Iran is the second-largest oil producer in the Middle East after Saudi Arabia.

China Disagrees

Iran has ignored three previous sets of UN sanctions and rejects Western allegations that it wants to build an atomic bomb. Iran says the nuclear program is designed to generate electricity for a growing population and that as a signatory to the nuclear it is entitled to continue such activities.

China disagrees with the EU’s “unilateral” sanctions against Iran and would prefer the nuclear fuel supply issue be solved through dialogue, , a spokeswoman for China’s foreign ministry, said in comments posted on the ministry’s website today.

Cannon said G-8 ministers will also discuss North Korea when they next meet.

“We have two states, Iran and North Korea, who aren’t behaving in a responsible fashion,” Cannon said. “They will be in our discussions.”

‘Highest’ Condemnation

North Korea has been under renewed international pressure since a South Korean warship was sunk in March. An international panel said it was torpedoed by a North Korean submarine, a charge that country has denied.

“We have condemned that to the highest extent,” Cannon said of the ship’s sinking. Canada, which helped with the international investigation of the sinking, said in May it would impose new on North Korea.

Cannon, 62, has been foreign minister since October 2008, and began in the federal cabinet as transport minister when he was first elected in 2006 in a Quebec district. He comes from a political family, with five relatives having served in Parliament and three others in Quebec’s provincial legislature.

On Afghanistan, where Canada has 2,800 soldiers, Cannon reiterated the country’s military mission will end next year. Canada has had 151 military in Afghanistan, more than in any conflict since the Korean War, and a diplomat was also killed.

Afghanistan

Prime Minister hasn’t outlined a detailed plan for Canada’s involvement after next year. In a speech that opened the last session of Parliament in March, the government said “after 2011, our effort in Afghanistan will focus on development and humanitarian aid.”

“We will be looking at the ways that we are going to be going forward in those areas, as well as our diplomatic relations with the government of Afghanistan,” said Cannon, who this month attended a major donors’ in Kabul.

“The international commitment is strong enough, the support is strong enough to be able to help this country in the right direction,” Cannon said. “The biggest risk of course is to fall back to the periods that are pre-2001.” In that period Afghanistan was ruled by the Taliban regime.

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