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Iranian nuclear scientist `assassinated by Mossad'

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  • Iranian nuclear scientist `assassinated by Mossad'

    Iranian nuclear scientist `assassinated by Mossad'

    The Sunday TimesUK
    February 04, 2007

    Sarah Baxter, Washington


    A PRIZE-WINNING Iranian nuclear scientist has died in mysterious
    circumstances, according to Radio Farda, which is funded by the US
    State Department and broadcasts to Iran.
    An intelligence source suggested that Ardeshire Hassanpour, 44, a
    nuclear physicist, had been assassinated by Mossad, the Israeli
    security service.

    Hassanpour worked at a plant in Isfahan where uranium hexafluoride gas
    is produced. The gas is needed to enrich uranium in another plant at
    Natanz which has become the focus of concerns that Iran may be
    developing nuclear weapons.

    According to Radio Farda, Iranian reports of Hassanpour's death emerged
    on January 21 after a delay of six days, giving the cause as `gas
    poisoning'. The Iranian reports did not say how or where Hassanpour was
    poisoned but his death was said to have been announced at a conference
    on nuclear safety.

    Rheva Bhalla of Stratfor, the US intelligence company, claimed on
    Friday that Hassanpour had been targeted by Mossad and that there was
    `very strong intelligence' to suggest that he had been assassinated by
    the Israelis, who have repeatedly threatened to prevent Iran acquiring
    the bomb.

    Hassanpour won Iran's leading military research prize in 2004 and was
    awarded top prize at the Kharazmi international science festival in
    Iran last year.

    President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad is expected to announce next Sunday ' the
    28th anniversary of the Islamic revolution ' that 3,000 centrifuges
    have been installed at Natanz, enabling Iran to move closer to
    industrial scale uranium enrichment.

    Inspectors from the International Atomic Energy Agency say that
    hundreds of technicians and labourers have been `working feverishly' to
    assemble equipment at the plant.
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