The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) said it did not
know about any undeclared nuclear facility in Syria by now, an
indirect rebuke to a recent US news report, the Austrian Press
Agency (APA) reported on Monday.
The UN nuclear watchdog "has no information about any undeclared
nuclear facility in Syria and no information about recent reports,"
Meilissa Fleming, a spokeswoman for the IAEA, was quoted as saying
by APA. Fleming said that the IAEA "is in contact with the Syrian
authorities to verify the authenticity of these reports," she
said.
Pledging to investigate any relevant information about recent
media reports, she said the agency expected "any country having
information about nuclear-related activities in another country to
provide that information to the IAEA."
Her statement seemed to be an indirect rebuke to a Sunday report
by The New York Times which cited unidentified US and foreign
officials as saying that an Israeli airstrike targeted an
undeclared nuclear site in Syria last month.
The report said the site was a unclear reactor that was years
away from completion and designed for stockpiling atomic bomb
fuel.
Satellite photographs detected the reactor earlier this year,
the report quoted US officials as saying.
The Syrian government has denied hiding any undeclared nuclear
facility or activity from the IAEA or taking any nuclear work other
than for energy goals. Syrian President Bashar al-Assad earlier
said the target was an unused military building.
Syria joined the IAEA in 1963 and has one small research reactor
and some other nuclear facilities for scientific research, all of
which were declared to the IAEA and have been under its
supervision.
(Xinhua News Agency October 16, 2007)