
-
Bangladesh begins three days of mass political rallies
-
Children learn emergency drills as Kashmir tensions rise
-
Millions of children to suffer from Trump aid cuts
-
Veteran Wallaby Beale set for long-awaited injury return
-
Syria's Druze take up arms to defend their town against Islamists
-
Tesla sales plunge further in France, down 59% in April
-
US calls on India and Pakistan to 'de-escalate'
-
Israel reopens key roads as firefighters battle blaze
-
Europe far-right surge masks divisions
-
James will mull NBA future after Lakers playoff exit
-
Ukraine's chief rabbi sings plea to Trump to side with Kyiv
-
Australian mushroom meal victim 'hunched' in pain, court hears
-
Lakers dumped out of playoffs by Wolves, Rockets rout Warriors
-
Booming tourism and climate change threaten Albania's coast
-
US reaching out to China for tariff talks: Beijing state media
-
Tariffs prompt Bank of Japan to lower growth forecasts
-
Kiss faces little time to set Wallabies on path to home World Cup glory
-
Serbian students, unions join forces for anti-corruption protest
-
Slow and easily beaten -- Messi's Miami project risks global embarrassment
-
Fan in hospital after falling to field at Pirates game
-
Nuclear power sparks Australian election battle
-
Tokyo stocks rise as BoJ holds rates steady
-
Bank of Japan holds rates, lowers growth forecasts
-
'Sleeping giants' Bordeaux-Begles awaken before Champions Cup semis
-
Napoli eye Scudetto as Inter hope for post-Barca bounce-back
-
Germany's 'absolutely insane' second tier rivalling Europe's best
-
PSG minds on Arsenal return as French clubs scrap for Champions League places
-
UK WWII veteran remembers joy of war's end, 80 years on
-
Myanmar junta lets post-quake truce expire
-
Rockets romp past Warriors to extend NBA playoff series
-
Messi, Inter Miami CONCACAF Cup dream over as Vancouver advance
-
UN body warns over Trump's deep-sea mining order
-
UK local elections test big two parties
-
US judge says Apple defied order in App Store case
-
Seventeen years later, Brood XIV cicadas emerge in US
-
Scorching 1,500m return for Olympic great Ledecky in Florida
-
Israel's Netanyahu warns wildfires could reach Jerusalem
-
Istanbul lockdown aims to prevent May Day marches
-
Formation Metals Announces Appointment of Adrian Smith to Advisory Committee
-
Cerrado Gold Announces Q4 And Annual 2024 Financial Results
-
Australian guard Daniels of Hawks named NBA's most improved
-
Mexico City to host F1 races until 2028
-
Morales vows no surrender in bid to reclaim Bolivian presidency
-
Ukraine, US sign minerals deal, tying Trump to Kyiv
-
Phenomenons like Yamal born every 50 years: Inter's Inzaghi
-
Ukraine, US say minerals deal ready as Kyiv hails sharing
-
Global stocks mostly rise following mixed economic data
-
O'Sullivan says he must play better to win eighth snooker world title after seeing off Si Jiahui
-
Sabalenka eases past Kostyuk into Madrid Open semis
-
Netflix's 'The Eternaut' echoes fight against tyranny: actor Ricardo Darin

Iran says IAEA report on undeclared sites 'not fair'
Iran condemned as "not fair" Tuesday a report by the UN nuclear watchdog on traces of nuclear material found at three undeclared sites.
The comments came with talks deadlocked since March on reviving a 2015 nuclear agreement between Tehran and world powers.
"Unfortunately, this report does not reflect the reality of the negotiations between Iran and the IAEA," Foreign Ministry spokesman Saeed Khatibzadeh told reporters, referring to the Monday report by the International Atomic Energy Agency.
"It's not a fair and balanced report," he said, adding: "We expect this path to be corrected."
In the report, the watchdog said it still had questions which were "not clarified" regarding nuclear material previously found at three sites -- Marivan, Varamin and Turquzabad -- which had not been declared by Iran as having hosted nuclear activities.
It said its long-running efforts to get Iranian officials to explain the presence of nuclear material had failed to provide answers to its questions.
Iran and the IAEA agreed in March on an approach for resolving the issue of the sites, one of the remaining obstacles to reviving the 2015 deal. IAEA chief Rafael Grossi is due to "report his conclusions" to the watchdog's board of governors at a meeting scheduled for next week.
Formally known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, the 2015 deal gave Iran relief from crippling economic sanctions in exchange for curbs on its nuclear activities.
The parties to the pact with Iran saw it as the best way to stop it from building a nuclear bomb -– a goal Tehran has always denied.
- Iran sees Israeli hand -
Then-US president Donald Trump unilaterally pulled out of the pact in 2018 and reimposed biting sanctions, prompting Iran to begin rolling back on its own commitments.
While most of the activities discussed in the IAEA report are thought to date back to the early 2000s, sources say that one of the sites, in the Turquzabad district of Tehran, may have been used for storing uranium as recently as 2018.
Iran saw an Israeli hand in the IAEA's latest findings.
"It is feared that the political pressure exerted by the Zionist regime and some other actors has caused the normal path of the agency's reports to change from technical to political," Khatibzadeh said.
Israel on Tuesday accused its arch-foe Iran of stealing classified documents from the IAEA to help it hide evidence of its nuclear programme.
Israel is adamantly opposed to the 2015 nuclear deal and any effort to restore it.
"Iran stole classified documents from the UN's Atomic Agency IAEA and used that information to systematically evade nuclear probes," Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett wrote on Twitter.
"How do we know? Because we got our hands on Iran's deception plan," Bennett wrote. His tweet included a link to eight files of documents in English and Farsi, as well as photographs.
The files were part of a cache allegedly taken by Israeli agents from an Iranian warehouse in 2018.
Iran's representative to the IAEA, Mohammad Reza Ghaebi, said earlier that the IAEA's report "does not reflect Iran's extensive cooperation with the agency".
"Iran considers this approach unconstructive to the current close relations and cooperation between the country and the IAEA," he said, adding: "The agency should be aware of the destructive consequences of publishing such one-sided reports."
In a separate report published Monday, the IAEA estimated that Iran's stockpile of enriched uranium had grown to more than 18 times the limit agreed in the 2015 deal.
Iran seeks the lifting of all sanctions that followed Trump's 2018 pullout.
"The issues being discussed between Iran and the US are related to the economic benefits to Iran and removing all the elements of the maximum pressure by the US," Khatibzadeh said.
"The pause in the negotiations is due to the US not giving an answer to the initiatives proposed by Iran and Europe."
L.Davis--AMWN