
Tehran criticized the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) in strong terms on Monday for inaction after repeated US and Israeli attacks near Iran's sole nuclear power plant.
In a letter to IAEA Director General Rafael Grossi, Iran’s Atomic Energy Organization chief Mohammad Eslami criticized him for failing to condemn the latest attack near the Bushehr nuclear power plant strongly enough.
This could encourage the “aggressors” to repeat these attacks, Eslami wrote, according to a report by the state-run news agency IRNA.
In Saturday's attack near the nuclear power plant in the south of the country, a member of the security staff was killed and an ancillary building was damaged. No damage was reported to the nuclear power plant itself.
But this is the fourth time since Israel and the US began the war in late February that a projectile has struck near the nuclear power plant or its premises.
The facility is Iran’s only nuclear power plant and is located about 760 kilometres south of Tehran on The Gulf. Its Russian-designed reactor has been generating electricity since 2011. The Russian state-owned nuclear company Rosatom is currently building a second reactor unit.
LATEST POSTS
- 1
UN mission says no evidence Hezbollah rearming in southern Lebanon - 2
Poll: 62% of Americans would oppose U.S. military action in Greenland - 3
This Week In Space podcast: Episode 204 — A New NASA - 4
Genome study reveals milestone in history of cat domestication - 5
I spent the last year transforming my life. Becoming a Rockette for a day made me confront a fear I couldn't shake.
NASA’s history-making moon mission aims to send the first woman and person of color to deep space
RSF attack on Sudan’s South Kordofan kills at least 14, including children
He walked on the moon in 1972. This is his advice for the Artemis II astronauts.
The Force of Mentorship: Self-improvement through Direction
6 Methods for further developing Rest Quality
Experience Unrivaled Sound: Top Speakers You Really want to Hear
Warship sunk by British fleet, remains of sailor found after 225 years
If evolution is real, then why isn’t it happening now? An anthropologist explains that humans actually are still evolving
Arctic is again the hottest it's been in 125 years, with record-low sea ice, NOAA report says













