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Iran: Ahmadinejad rejects any incentive plan to suspend nuclear program

Sample ImageNCRI- Iranian regime's president said in an interview with Kyodo News published on Friday that he would reject any new incentives offered by world powers in return for suspending nuclear program.

"This is a non-negotiable subject," Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was quoted by Japan's Kyodo News when asked if such incentives carry conditions demanding that Iran suspend its enrichment activities.

Ahmadinejad told Kyodo that the suspension of its uranium enrichment was an issue related to the past as "we have passed this stage."

On March 3, the UN Security Council adopted its third resolution imposing sanctions against the ruling mullahs in Iran.

The third resolution underlined the contents of the previous resolutions and reiterated that the Iranian regime had not cooperated with the additional protocol and not complied with the mandates of the IAEA Board of Governors.

The secret Iranian regime's nuclear program was revealed by the Iranian Resistance in August 2002. The revelations triggered International Atomic Energy Agency inspections of the Iranian regime's secret nuclear program.

On February 24, quoting Ahamadinejad’s remarks, the state-run news agency IRNA said, “The nuclear crisis in its new form began in the beginning of the summer of 2002, when the Monafeqin [the term used by the Iranian regime to describe the People's Mojahedin Organization of Iran (PMOI/MEK)], published a report on Natanz and Arak nuclear sites. The International Atomic Energy Agency  got involved… and resolutions were adopted one after the other.”