The team, led by nuclear engineer Massimo Aparo, will begin reporting to the IAEA on Monday, marking the official start of the deal, according to the Islamic Republic News Agency.
Under the terms of the agreement with the United States, Russia, China, France, Britain and Germany,
Iran will stop work on some portions of its nuclear program in exchange
for relief from some international sanctions which have damaged the
country's economy.
The IAEA team will visit the Natanz
and Fordow nuclear facilities to ensure that Iran will stop enriching
uranium to 20 percent and that its stockpile of enriched uranium is
diluted, according to Fars News.
Last month, a number of hardline lawmakers introduced a bill in the Iranian parliament pushing for an increase of uranium enrichment up to 60 percent, ostensibly for use in nuclear submarines.
The bill was seen as a counter to a US Senate bill to increase sanctions on Iran but has yet to be voted on in the Iranian parliament. If the bill passes it would likely sink the deal between Iran and six world powers.
Officials from Iran's Atomic Energy Organization met the IAEA team at the airport, and the two groups are scheduled to have meetings on Saturday, IRNA reported.
Iran monitoring to cost $6 million - Nuke agency
The
UN nuclear agency estimates that monitoring Iran's compliance with
terms of the nuclear deal Tehran reached with six world powers will cost
$6 million (4.4 million euros.) The figure is contained in a
confidential report, the AP reports. It was prepared for a meeting
Monday of the UN International Atomic Energy Agency's 35-nation
governing board, which is expected to approve the IAEA's monitoring
role.
The report says the IAEA can save minimal costs by
reassigning some staff but most of the funding will have to come from
contributions.
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