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Iranian nuclear chief steps down | |
(about 3 hours later) | |
The long-serving head of Iran's Atomic Energy Organisation, Gholam Reza Aghazadeh, has resigned, Iranian media and officials have said. | |
The nuclear chief had submitted a letter of resignation to President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad nearly three weeks ago, the Isna news agency said. | |
It was not immediately clear what triggered the resignation. | It was not immediately clear what triggered the resignation. |
Iran says its nuclear programme is for civilian power, denying Western claims that it wants a nuclear bomb. | |
Mr Aghazadeh also stepped down as the country's vice-president, Isna reported. | |
The agency said it had spoken to Mr Aghazadeh, who gave no explanation for his move but told them that Mr Ahmadinejad had accepted the resignation. | The agency said it had spoken to Mr Aghazadeh, who gave no explanation for his move but told them that Mr Ahmadinejad had accepted the resignation. |
A spokesman for Iran's atomic energy department and the official Irna news agency confirmed the news. | |
'Limited impact' | |
Mr Aghazadeh is a veteran official who served in the 1980s as a deputy to Mir Hossein Mousavi - the defeated candidate in Iran's disputed presidential elections last month. | |
In 1985 he began a 12-year stint as oil minister, staying in the post during the presidency of Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani. | |
He then moved to his job at the head of the atomic agency in 1997 under the reformist former president, Mohammad Khatami. | |
He continued in the post when Mr Ahmadinejad was first elected in 2005. | |
It was not clear whether Mr Aghazadeh's resignation was linked to Iran's 12 June disputed presidential elections, in which Mr Ahmadinejad claimed victory. | |
Mr Aghazadeh has made no public comment on the turmoil that followed the vote. | |
Correspondents say that although Mr Aghazadeh has long supervised Iran's nuclear programme, his resignation may have a limited impact on negotiations with Western powers, which are headed by Iranian nuclear envoy Saeed Jalili. | |
Control over Iran's foreign and nuclear policies ultimately lies with Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. | |
The news of Mr Aghazadeh's resignation came a day after US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton warned Iran that the US would not extend its offer of engagement indefinitely. | |
President Barack Obama has talked of engagement with Iran but has not made clear how that might take place. |