Former Iranian president Mohammad Khatami has pledged the
Islamic Republic will never develop nuclear weapons and called
for the crisis over Iran's atomic programme to be settled through
talks, a report said Saturday.
Khatami's appeal on Friday in the Indian capital, New Delhi,
came 24 hours before the UN Security Council was set to slap
new sanctions on Iran over its refusal to suspend all uranium
enrichment activity.
"Iran will never go for nuclear weapons," Khatami
told a media conference in the city, according to the Indian
Express newspaper.
"Weapons of mass destruction have never been our objective,"
he said.
Iran was always ready to give an "objective guarantee"
on its commitment not to develop nuclear weapons and the issue
should be solved "through negotiations," he added.
The "sensitive" region, which is already facing many
problems over Iraq and Palestine, does not need another crisis,
he said.
Khatami reiterated that Iran was pursuing its nuclear energy
programme to meet its energy requirements.
"We have a huge reserve of oil and natural gas but it
won't last long. Many countries in the world see fossil fuels
as harmful and are looking for replacements," he said.
"Nuclear energy is the most accessible form of energy.
We must also make use of wind and solar energy, said Khatami,
who met Prime Minister Manmohan Singh later in the day.
Nuclear-armed and energy-hungry India, which has long-standing
ties with Iran, has repeatedly called for dialogue to resolve
the row over Tehran's suspected nuclear ambitions.
India, Pakistan and Iran are engaged in talks to build a 2,600-kilometre
(1,600-mile) Iran-Pakistan-India gas pipeline for Iranian natural
gas.
However, earlier this month India banned all imports and exports
to and from Iran that could contribute to Tehran's nuclear programme
as a result of sanctions against Iran imposed by the Security
Council in December.
Security Council members reached broad agreement late Friday
on a draft resolution expanding the December sanctions after
Iran spurned demands to freeze its sensitive nuclear fuel work.
The draft resolution would ban Tehran from exporting arms,
calls for voluntary trade sanctions and expands a list of officials
and companies targeted for financial and travel restrictions.