Cause of incident at Natanz nuclear site identified, to be announced at appropriate time: SNSC

A handout picture released by the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran on November 6, 2019, shows the entrance of the Natanz nuclear facility.

Iran's Supreme National Security Council (SNSC) says the "main cause" of a recent incident at the country’s Natanz nuclear facility has been determined and will be announced at an appropriate time.

SNSC Spokesman Keyvan Khosravi said on Friday that experts from different sectors started investigating "different hypotheses" about the incident at the Natanz site in central Iran immediately after its occurrence, and have determined its main cause.

"Due to some security considerations, the cause and manner of this incident will be announced at a proper time," he added.

He noted that the damage to one of the sheds under construction at the Natanz complex was limited and said investigators did not find any nuclear material at the building.

The Iranian security official emphasized that rumors about radioactive contamination following the incident are completely rejected.

The spokesman for the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran (AEOI), Behrouz Kamalvandi, on Thursday reported an incident at the Natanz nuclear complex but emphasized that there has been no damage to the main uranium enrichment facility.

He said the incident caused no casualties and did not affect the activities at the complex.

Later on Thursday, an informed Iranian security official told Press TV that there was no evidence to show that the incident at the Natanz nuclear facility was an act of sabotage.

In an interview on Thursday evening, Kamalvandi said the incident had caused no stoppage or slowdown of enrichment work at the Natanz facility, because the affected shed was actually under construction and not part of the enrichment process yet.

Natanz is a uranium enrichment center located in the city of the same name in Isfahan Province, some 250 kilometers (155 miles) south of the capital, Tehran.

It is among the sites now being monitored by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) under a 2015 nuclear deal between Tehran and major powers.

The IAEA, meanwhile, announced that it was aware of the incident but did not foresee any change to the UN nuclear watchdog’s regular verification of Iran’s commitments to the body’s Safeguards Agreement as a result of the development.

It said the location where the incident occurred does not contain nuclear materials.

The Safeguards Agreement between Iran and the IAEA ensures non-diversion of nuclear material declared by the Islamic Republic.


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