(Reuters) -
Gunmen killed five nuclear engineers, four of them Syrian and one
Iranian, on the outskirts of Damascus on Sunday, a monitoring group said
on Monday. The engineers were
shot dead as they were traveling in a small convoy to a research center
near the northeastern district of Barzeh, the Syrian Observatory for
Human Rights said. No one
claimed responsibility and Syrian and Iranian state media did not
mention the attack, which occurred in an area controlled by forces loyal
to President Bashar al-Assad. The
U.N. atomic agency (IAEA) said last year that Syria declared a "small
amount of nuclear material" at a Miniature Neutron Source Reactor, a
type of research reactor usually fueled by highly enriched uranium, near
Damascus. Iran has backed
Assad throughout Syria's three-year war and Iranian military advisers
are working with Syrian forces throughout the country. The
IAEA has also asked for permission for years to visit a site in the
eastern province Deir al-Zor that U.S. intelligence reports say was a
nascent, North Korean-designed reactor geared to making plutonium for
nuclear bombs. Israel bombed it in 2007. Iran,
the United States and the European Union began a second day of talks in
Oman on Monday to discuss ways to resolve a confrontation over Tehran's
nuclear program, U.S. and Iranian officials said.
Five nuclear engineers, one of them Iranian, killed in Syria: monitor
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