Parliament to endorse 3-urgency plan to resume nuclear activity
EghtesadOnline: Iran's Parliament (Majlis) is to mull a three-urgency plan which mandates Iranian government to resume nuclear activities.
The move is made in reaction to the US Senate approval of a legislation which extends the Iran Sanction Act (ISA) for another ten years.
Member of Majlis Presiding Body Akbar Ranjbarzadeh said the US Senate approval of a legislation which extends the ISA for another ten years is in violation of the JCPOA and international law.
Ranjbarzadeh told IRNA, 'The three-urgency plan on resumption of nuclear activities has been compiled on emergency to counter the US move.'
He said the plan consists an article and five notes in line with the two- and three-urgency plans to counter the Senate approval.
He added that the two- or three-urgency nature of the plan will be decided by Iranian lawmakers , aiming to confront the approval by the US Senate and House of Representatives.
The parliamentarian said the two-urgency plans will be finalized within 72 hours and turn into a law.
He said the reason the plan is three-urgency in nature is the emergency condition arising as a result, justifying taking the course which would let adoption of fundamental and principled measures in reaction to the damage thus far inflicted on Iran and in proportion to explicit action of Americans, especially the approval of the Senate.
Ranjbarzadeh said per Article 160 of Parliament (Majlis), the two-urgency plans are taken on the necessity to avoid damage. This is while damage has been inflicted and 'we wish to present the vital plan in three-urgency form to repel the absolute damage inflicted on the country.'
He noted that from the leadership point of view, the two-urgency plan had been brought to the information of the arrogance. 'We will go our own way so as not to lose time and we will embark on action. The US president has taken the course of confrontation; we will also take our own way and the three-urgency plan is more suitable than the two-urgency plan so as to confront Americans' plan more speedily.'
'Now too the land of our nuclear and knowledgeable scientists has been invaded and they have taken away considerable portion of what we had already gained; they wish to deprive us of all our nuclear achievements,' said Ranjbarzadeh.
He concluded, 'The ones who have acted in violation of the international regulations and have defied them are the US and the Congress of the country and we are going to condition the plan on rapid launching of our action and taking comprehensive and complete measures in connection with resumption of the nuclear activities. We constantly and round-the-clock inform the world through the (Iranian) diplomatic organ and the media that the US was the initiator of the illegal act and we have no option but reciprocating. Our ways are reciprocation and defensive in nature and are not aimed at intruding into the scientific and ethical borders.'