"I have seen [a memorandum of understanding]
to export uranium to the Iranians," Zimbabwean Deputy Mining Minister Gift
Chimanikire said.
The agreement, which was reportedly signed last
year, is likely to cause alarm in Western capitals.
The United States and the European Union have
imposed crippling sanctions on Iran over its nuclear programme which Tehran
insists is for peaceful energy uses but which they fear is intended to build a
bomb.
Zimbabwe is also subject to international
sanctions over its human rights record and conduct of elections.
President Robert Mugabe, who won another
five-year term in disputed polls last month, has publicly backed Iran's nuclear
drive.
During a visit by Iran's then president, Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad, to Harare in April 2010, Mugabe said his guest should be assured
of "Zimbabwe's continuous support of Iran's just cause on the nuclear
issue".
Chimanikire is a member of Zimbabwe's opposition
who is likely to be replaced now that the election has brought an end to the
shaky coalition government.
He said the uranium deal had been made without
his knowledge, and was only known to a handful of people at the top of the
government.
Despite the agreement, analysts sayi that it was
likely to be a long time before Zimbabwe's uranium reserves were ready for
export.
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