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Jordan insists on nuclear development

by Utilities ME Staff on Jun 29, 2010

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Jordan wants to join the nuclear club.
Jordan wants to join the nuclear club.

Energy-poor Jordan, which is in talks with the United States to sign a nuclear cooperation deal, said Monday it does not want to give up its right to peaceful atomic power under international treaties, writes the AFP newswire.

"We are now in continuous negotiations with the United States, and the latest round was in Washington last week," Khaled Tukan, head of Jordan's Atomic Energy Commission, told AFP.

"But I think we still don't have common ground. They started to understand our viewpoint, but still (there is) no common ground."
Tukan said the Americans want their ally Jordan to sign a nuclear agreement similar to a deal they reached with the United Arab Emirates, which "has relinquished its rights under the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT)."

"The United Arab Emirates has relinquished all its NPT rights to sensitive nuclear technology indefinitely," he said, adding: "Why should we give up our rights?"

Tukan said Article Four of the NPT stipulates that "all countries have the right to full utilisation of peaceful nuclear energy, research and development."

"We

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are sticking and adhering to the NPT, and (we want) full rights and privileges under the NPT," he said.

Jordan, which imports about 95 percent of its energy needs, has signed nuclear cooperation agreements with several countries in a bid to produce atomic energy for power generation and water desalination.
The country's 1.2 billion tonnes of phosphate reserves are estimated to contain 130,000 tonnes of uranium and the government wants the first nuclear plant to be ready by 2015.

The kingdom is the latest Sunni Arab country, including Egypt and pro-Western Gulf Arab states, to announce plans for nuclear power programmes in the face of Shiite Iran's controversial atomic drive.
On Monday, Israel's former justice minister Yossi Beilin slammed his country for trying to block Jordan from enriching its large reserves of uranium in its bid to become self-sufficient in electricity.

"There is a certain risk in allowing Jordan to enrich uranium so close to Israel’s border, but the risk in denying the king’s request is far greater," he wrote in the International Herald Tribune.

Beilin was referring to King Abdullah II, who in an interview with the Wall Street Journal on June 12, accused Israel of making "underhand" efforts to prevent his country from developing a peaceful nuclear energy programme.
 




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