
Leaders of the European Union reiterated on Friday their support for possible additional U.N. sanctions against Iran if it fails to give up nuclear enrichment work and repeated an offer of support if it did so, reported Reuters on Saturday.
A joint statement from leaders of the 27 EU states meeting in Brussels called on Iran to provide “full, clear and credible answers” to the U.N. International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) to resolve questions about its nuclear activity.
They added that the council of member states “reiterates its full support to the work in the U.N. Security Council to adopt further measures” and said a decision would be taken at the next meeting of EU foreign ministers due on January 28, in the light of upcoming decisions in the U.N. Security Council.
British Prime Minister Gordon Brown told a news briefing the European Union had received “no assurances about uranium enrichment and the purpose of it in Iran”.
“There is no evidence of a civil nuclear program and therefore the Iranian enrichment that has been part of the work of Iran is a problem for the international community,” he said.
“We will fight for a further U.N. resolution on these issues and of course consider further sanctions in the matter.”