VIENNA, Austria - Delegates to a 35-nation meeting of the International 
Atomic Energy Agency on Thursday approved the suspension of nearly two dozen 
nuclear technical aid programs to Iran as part of UN sanctions imposed because 
its nuclear defiance. 
 
 
   A general view shows the Bushehr nuclear power plant in Iran, 
 June 2006. The European Union urged Iran on Wednesday to take up an offer 
 to suspend its nuclear enrichment in return for suspending sanctions on 
 Tehran. [AFP]
   | 
The decision to deprive Iran of 23 
projects was taken by consensus and was expected. Even nations on the IAEA board 
normally supportive of Iran backed it because it was recommended by agency chief 
Mohamed ElBaradei, on authority of the UN Security Council. 
"I have not heard anyone express dissatisfaction" with ElBaradei's 
recommendations, said Ramzy Ezzeidin Ramzy, Egypt's chief IAEA representative, 
before the decision, reflecting the meeting's widespread unanimity on the issue. 
The suspensions fell under the provision of UN Security Council sanctions 
agreed on Dec. 23 to punish Iran for defying a council demand that it freeze its 
uranium enrichment activities. The five permanent council members now are 
consulting on additional sanctions after Tehran ignored a new ultimatum to stop 
enrichment last month. 
Council diplomats in New York said these could include a travel ban, an 
expanded list of people and companies subject to an asset freeze, an arms 
embargo and trade restrictions, but they cautioned that differences remained. 
While Iran says it has the legal right to develop an enrichment program to 
generate nuclear power, the Security Council has called on it to end such 
activities because of fears it could misuse the process to produce the fissile 
material for warheads.