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'Abducted' Iranian nuclear scientist arrives in Tehran

Russia expects nuclear explanations from Iran: Medvedev
Yekaterinburg, Russia (AFP) July 15, 2010 - Russia wants Iran to provide explanations over its nuclear programme and fully cooperate with the international community, President Dmitry Medvedev said on Thursday. In his latest tough statement on the Islamic republic's atomic drive, Medvedev warned Iran's leadership that it does not "live in space" and said Iranian leaders were using the nuclear crisis for political ends. "Iran is an active trade partner of ours. But this does not mean that we are indifferent to how Iran is developing its nuclear programme," Medvedev said at a news conference alongside German Chancellor Angela Merkel.

"We are not indifferent to how the military component of this programme looks. In this respect we expect the corresponding explanations from Iran," he said. "Iran should find the courage to start full cooperation with the international community, even if it does not like some of the questions that are posed," he added. Medvedev angered Iranian officials but gladdened the United States earlier this week when he declared that Iran was close to having the potential to build a nuclear weapon. Russia, traditionally a diplomatic and economic ally of Iran, in the past took a milder line against Tehran than Western powers but recently has noticeably hardened its position amid improving relations with the United States.

The change in rhetoric has caused an unprecedented slump in its relations with Iran and Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has warned Moscow that it risks joining Washington as a historic enemy of Tehran. "In the end they of course do not live in space," said Medvedev. "And they must understand the responsibility that Iran has before the international community." "I understand that this issue is one of national pride for Iran, it is an issue around which there is unity in Iran and also a topic which is actively exploited by Iranian leaders for their own political ends," he said. However, economic cooperation is continuing between the two sides and a day earlier Russian Energy Minister Sergei Shmatko and Iranian Oil Minister Massoud Mir Kazemi agreed to work on a "roadmap" for future joint work. Shmatko also said Russian companies were ready to supply fuel to energy-hungry Iran, despite unilateral US and EU sanctions targeting Tehran's oil and gas sectors.
by Staff Writers
Tehran (AFP) July 15, 2010
An Iranian nuclear scientist who surfaced in Washington after disappearing since June last year amid allegations that he was "abducted" by US spies arrived in Tehran Thursday, an AFP correspondent said.

Shahram Amiri arrived at Tehran's Imam Khomeini airport at around 5:30 am (0100 GMT) and was welcomed by his wife and other family members and deputy foreign minister Hassan Ghashghavi.

He was continuously flashing victory sign as he met his family.

Amiri had gone missing from Saudi Arabia in June 2009 while on a pilgrimage and surfaced in Iran's Interests Section in Washington on Tuesday.

Iranian officials claim he was kidnapped by the Central Intelligence Agency of the United States. US officials have denied these accusations.

His mysterious disappearance last year, followed by conflicting video footages of a man claiming to be Amiri and talking of being abducted, has baffled the world media for months.

Amiri's disappearance also became linked to rising international pressure over Tehran's controversial nuclear programme, which Iran says is for peaceful purposes but many nations led by the United States fear masks a weapons drive.

On Tuesday, Amiri took refuge in Iran's Interests Section office in Washington and gave interviews to Iranian television, claiming he had been abducted and saying he wanted to go home as soon as possible.

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said there was nothing to stop him leaving.

"He's free to go. He was free to come. These decisions are his alone to make," she said.

State Department spokesman Philip Crowley echoed that on Wednesday.

"Nobody coerced him to come here and nobody coerced him to leave," he said. "If he wants to talk about his experiences here, that's up to him."

Before jetting out of Washington on Wednesday, Amiri said in an interview broadcast on Iranian state television he had been abducted at gunpoint in Saudi Arabia.

He said he had been approached by besuited Farsi-speaking men in a car in the Saudi city of Medina and offered a ride to the mosque.

"As I opened the door, one of the passengers pulled out a gun and told me to be quiet. They gave me an injection and when I came around I was in a big plane. I was blindfolded. It was likely a military plane," he said.

Amiri said he had been under "intense mental torture" during the past 14 months and vowed to reveal full details of his ordeal when he returns home.

The disappearance of Amiri, who worked in a university linked with the Revolutionary Guards, sparked accusations by Iranian officials that he was kidnapped by the CIA.

Washington denied the allegations as well as speculation in the US media that Amiri had defected to the United States and was working with the CIA.

The speculation was further compounded when a man claiming to be Amiri was shown in two different video footages on June 7 -- one claiming he was kidnapped by US agents and the other saying he was studying in Tucson, Arizona.

These videos were followed by a third one a few weeks later in which the man said he had escaped from the custody of US spies in Virginia.

US officials consistently denied Amiri's kidnapping but on Tuesday Crowley confirmed that Washington had been in touch with him.

"The United States government has maintained contact with him," he said, adding that Amiri "has been here for some time, I'm not going to specify for how long."

Crowley also refused to comment on whether Amiri had provided Washington with intelligence.

Amir rejected reports that he had defected to Washington and shared Iranian nuclear secrets with US experts.

He said he had during the months of his abduction been pressured to say "that I have taken refuge in America at my own will and have brought along ... documents to America. I didn't accept that at all."

Amiri further claimed that Israel was planning to keep him in its "secret prisons" in order to force him to talk "and if I did not talk, they would tell the world media I had cooperated with them and publish forged information in my name."



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