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Afte
r a nearly four-year interruption, United Nations arms
inspectors resumed their probe into Iraq's weapons programme today,
visiting three sites outside Baghdad.
Inspectors from the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA),
which is responsible for investigating Iraq's nuclear programme,
visited a science research centre in northern Baghdad and were able
to complete their work as planned, with access to what they wanted
to see and full cooperation from the Iraqis, according to a
spokesman for the Agency.
"We're hopeful that today's cooperation reflects a future pattern
on the part of Iraq," IAEA spokesman Mark Gwozdecky told UN Radio
in New York.
The spokesman stressed that inspectors had the right to choose the
days and times, as well as the sites, for inspections, and were not
limiting themselves to those that were previously investigated
during the 1990s.
"We're not excluding inspections at any site, and that means we
will be visiting sites that we previously visited in the 1990s,
plus new ones," Mr. Gwozdecky said. "Today, for example, the site
we visited was not directly involved in the past nuclear weapons
programme, so again, we're prepared to go anywhere at any
time."
Meanwhile, the team of inspectors from the UN Monitoring,
Verification and Inspection Commission (UNMOVIC) visited two sites
- a graphite plant and a missile engine testing facility - at Al
Rafah, approximately 130 kilometres southwest of Baghdad.
UNMOVIC inspection team leader Dimitri Perricos told reporters
afterwards that the site his group had visited today had been
inspected in the past. Asked about the reason for his interest in
graphite, Mr. Perricos said that graphite could be used for pencils
as well as for missile batteries, and that it could be used in the
cone of a missile during re-entry - UN News.