Lebanon is 'inseparable part' of ceasefire: Iran parliament speaker
"Ceasefire violations carry explicit costs and strong responses," says Iran's parliament speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf.
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TEHRAN: Iran's parliament speaker on Thursday (Apr 9) said Lebanon was a key part of the two-week ceasefire with the United States, warning that violations would bring severe consequences, following massive Israeli strikes on Lebanon.
"Lebanon and the entire Resistance Axis, as Iran's allies, form an inseparable part of the ceasefire," Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf said in a post on X.
"Ceasefire violations carry explicit costs and STRONG responses," he added.
Amid fears that the fragile truce could break down in the Gulf, there were international calls for the ceasefire to encompass Lebanon.
"Israeli actions are putting the US-Iran ceasefire under severe strain. The Iran truce should extend to Lebanon," the European Union's top diplomat Kaja Kallas said.
France's foreign minister Jean-Noel Barrot condemned the strikes as "unacceptable", while his British counterpart Yvette Cooper called for the ceasefire to include Lebanon.
The Lebanese prime minister's office said Thursday would be "a national day of mourning for the martyrs and wounded of the Israeli attacks that targeted hundreds of innocent, defenceless civilians".
At least 203 people were killed and 1,000 wounded in the latest strikes, the Lebanese health ministry said.
IRAN RULES OUT RESTRICTIONS ON URANIUM ENRICHMENT
The head of Iran's nuclear energy agency, meanwhile, ruled out any restrictions on the country's enrichment of uranium, saying the demand by the United States and Israel "will not come true".
"The claims and demands of our enemies to restrict Iran's enrichment programme are merely wishes that will be buried," Mohammad Eslami was quoted as saying by Iran's ISNA news agency on Thursday.
His remarks came with talks set to take place at the end of the week between Iran and the United States under Pakistani mediation.
"All the conspiracies and actions of our enemies, including this brutal war, have yielded no results. Now they seek to achieve something through negotiations," Eslami said.
The issue of uranium enrichment has been central to Western relations with Iran for more than two decades, with the US and its allies accusing Tehran of seeking atomic weapons, while Iran has always insisted its programme is for civilian purposes only.
US President Donald Trump has insisted "there will be no enrichment of uranium" by Iran after the war.
He argued before the current war that Iran was rushing to build atomic weapons, an assertion not backed by the UN's nuclear watchdog.
The US-Israeli strikes on Feb 28 that began the latest conflict took place with Washington and Tehran engaged in negotiations that included Iran's nuclear programme.
During last June's 12-day war, Israel and the United States hit Iran's nuclear programme, claiming to have obliterated its ability to enrich uranium.
Nevertheless, the whereabouts of several hundred kilogrammes of highly enriched uranium remains unknown following the bombing.
It is thought to be buried under the rubble of a bombed location, with Trump suggesting in a social media post that Iran and the US could work together to "dig up and remove all of the deeply buried" nuclear material.
Before last year's war, Iran had been enriching uranium to 60 per cent, well above the 3.67 per cent limit allowed by a now-defunct 2015 nuclear agreement and close to the 90 per cent needed to make a bomb, according to the International Atomic Energy Agency.
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