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To: DoctorZIn
Industrial development hinges on privatization

Arak, Central prov, Aug 17, IRNA --

Minister of Mines and Industry Eshaq Jahangiri said here Saturday that industrial sector will not progress, "unless the private sector is the focus of national economic policies."

He added that industrial development is unavoidable and economic growth and higher employment hinges on effective industrial strategies.
"The resolution of economic issues, as the main government
concerns, are possible through bolstering of private sector," Jahangiri said.

In the past three years many beneficial laws and regulations pertaining to the private sector and outlined in the Third Five-Year Development Plan (March 2000-March 2005) have been implemented, the minister of industry and mines underlined.

He said the total investment volume in industry and in industrial units have been significant in the last six years and over 5,000 units have gone on stream in the same period.

In 1997 the number of industrial units nationwide were fewer than 8,000 units, Jahangiri said.

In most recent statements on Iran's industrial plans and its effects on the economy, Jahangiri said last week that the government plans to call for creating 200,000 employment opportunities in the country in the current Iranian year (started March21).

Speaking at a nation-wide meeting of industrialists, he added that although prospects for attaining the employment figure are good, a 10 percent growth in the industrial sector was a pre-requisite to achieve this goal.

Jahangiri referring to the 10 percent industrial growth rate over the past two years, expressed optimism about "attaining an even better growth rate this year."

He also said the future bodes ill for "educated unemployed" saying that generating employment should be such that it prevents brain drain and meet the needs of job seekers.

He referred to the 20-year plan for industrial sector adding that it stipulates an eight percent economic growth rate "which is likely to expedite development of the industry sector."

Also, the plan calls for industrial exports to top dlrs 28-30 billion by the year 2020 from dlrs three billion now.

Jahangiri further said Iran's strategic plan is based on
industrial development and all of other socio-economic plans should be consistent with industrial development.

He said the Fourth Five-Year Development Plan (2005-2010) is being drawn up by the government and experts committees have been formed for this purpose.
http://www.irna.ir/en/tnews/030817003317.etn03.shtml
22 posted on 08/17/2003 8:50:07 AM PDT by DoctorZIn
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To: DoctorZIn
Treaty's `Fuel Cycle' Guarantee is Potential Road to Bomb

August 16, 2003
The Associated Press
Charles J. Hanley

WASHINGTON -- The Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty has a ``giant loophole'' big enough to slip an atom bomb through, analysts say. Trying to close it would set off a giant political struggle.

The treaty bars 183 nations without nuclear weapons from building them, but allows them to pursue civilian programs, including uranium-enrichment plants to produce fuel. That production, if intensified, can also yield richer fuel for nuclear bombs.

The latest example is Iran, which acknowledged to the International Atomic Energy Agency in February that it was building a centrifuge plant to enrich uranium. The United States contends the plant will fuel a bomb program.

Arms control advocates are growing more alarmed about this ``fuel cycle'' opening.

``There is a giant loophole in the NPT that needs to be closed before other states try to use it,'' George Perkovich of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace told a congressional committee in June.

The world already has too many facilities to enrich uranium and to separate plutonium the other bomb fuel and ``no additional states need acquire such capabilities that are inherently proliferation sensitive,'' Perkovich testified.

The treaty is unlikely to be amended by its member states, however, since this political tradeoff between renouncing weapons and having open access to nuclear technology lies at the heart of the 1970 pact.

Any effort to alter the treaty ``will be detested among developing countries,'' said Patricia Lewis, director of the U.N. Institute for Disarmament Research.

Instead, some say, nuclear supplier nations could agree among themselves to keep the technology out of new hands.

Such exports, usually clandestine, have helped past bomb programs. China sold vital centrifuge magnets to Pakistan as it developed its bombs, for example, and West German engineering firms quietly helped Iraq in the 1980s with centrifuge designs and parts.

In the 1990s, Russia signed an unannounced agreement with Iran for a centrifuge plant, but then backed out of the deal under U.S. pressure. It isn't known what foreign help Iran may have gotten on its new plant.

Stopping the trade ``is something that has to be taken very seriously,'' said arms control scholar Lawrence Scheinman in Washington.

He said suppliers could decide to interpret ``access to technology'' to mean access outside the developing country that is, to fuel production facilities elsewhere. Russia, long keen to sell its nuclear technology, might be convinced of such a plan if guaranteed a big chunk of the uranium enrichment and plutonium reprocessing business, he said.

http://cbsnewyork.com/international/WMD-NuclearLoophole-ai/resources_news_html
23 posted on 08/17/2003 8:55:50 AM PDT by DoctorZIn
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