United Nations nuclear inspectors, banned by Iran earlier this year from visiting a heavy-water reactor at Arak, will be allowed to inspect it before the end of July.
In major concessions to international demands, Iran has agreed to answer lingering questions about its nuclear experiments and will let U.N. inspectors return to a plutonium-producing reactor it is building, the International Atomic Energy Agency said Friday.
Iran will allow UN inspectors to visit a site for a plutonium-producing reactor to which it had blocked access, the UN atomic agency said Friday, as Tehran moved to show greater cooperation.
United Nations nuclear inspectors who were banned earlier this year by Iran from visiting the Arak heavy-water reactor will now be allowed to inspect it before the end of July, the International Atomic Energy Agency said Friday.
Iran has agreed to let UN inspectors visit a heavy water reactor by the end of July, as part of a series of measures aimed at clearing up questions over Tehran's nuclear work, the UN atomic agency said Friday.
VIENNA, Austria -- U.N. nuclear inspectors banned earlier this year by Iran from visiting a heavy water reactor will now be allowed to inspect it before the end of July, the International Atomic Energy Agency said Friday.
Iran has agreed to allow U.N. inspections of its heavy water research reactor by the end of the month, the International Atomic Energy Agency said Friday.
The U.N. nuclear watchdog said on Friday Iran had agreed to allow inspectors to visit its Arak nuclear plant following talks on how to resolve outstanding questions about Tehran's disputed nuclear program.
Iran has lifted its ban on visits to a nuclear facility by U.N. experts and now will allow them to inspect the site, the International Atomic Energy Agency said Friday.
Iran confirmed on Friday it will let International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) inspectors this month visit a reactor being built at Arak which could produce heavy water, the ISNA news agency said.