A view shows the scene of the attack that killed Prominent Iranian scientist Mohsen Fakhrizadeh, outside Tehran, Iran, November 27, 2020. A senior Iranian official said yesterday an opposition group was suspected of complicity with Israel in the killing of the nuclear scientist. — Reuters pic
A view shows the scene of the attack that killed Prominent Iranian scientist Mohsen Fakhrizadeh, outside Tehran, Iran, November 27, 2020. A senior Iranian official said yesterday an opposition group was suspected of complicity with Israel in the killing of the nuclear scientist. — Reuters pic

DUBAI, Dec 1 — A draft bill requiring Iran’s government to pursue uranium enrichment of 20 per cent, and to disregard other restraints put on its nuclear programme by an accord reached with foreign powers in 2015 cleared its first hurdle in parliament today.

The legislation was proposed in the wake of the assassination of a top nuclear scientist on Friday, and the hardline-dominated parliament cleared the draft on the first reading in a session broadcast live on state radio.

The bill still has to be approved in a second reading and endorsed by a clerical body before it becomes law.

A senior Iranian official said yesterday an opposition group was suspected of complicity with Israel in the killing of nuclear scientist Mohsen Fakhrizadeh, an attack that has raised the prospect of heightened tensions between Tehran and its longtime enemy.

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Parliament has often demanded without much success a hardening of Iran’s position on the nuclear issue in recent years.

Iran has already breached limits in its nuclear deal with world powers to protest at a US withdrawal from the accord. The maximum fissile purity to which it has enriched uranium has remained around 4.5 per cent, above the deal’s 3.67 per cent cap but below the 20 per cent Iran has achieved before and the 90 per cent required for a nuclear bomb. — Reuters