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India firm on N-test prerogative

INDIA HAS denied claims it has agreed to a permanent ban on its ability to carry out nuclear tests as part of the Indo-US civil nuclear cooperation agreement. Officials said the ban was part of a draft put forward by US negotiators a few weeks ago.

Published on: Apr 18, 2006 12:26 PM IST
None | By , New Delhi
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INDIA HAS denied claims it has agreed to a permanent ban on its ability to carry out nuclear tests as part of the Indo-US civil nuclear cooperation agreement.

Officials said the ban was part of a draft put forward by US negotiators a few weeks ago. India rejected the testing ban, saying it was bound only by its existing voluntary moratorium.

HT Image
HT Image

On Monday, Ministry of External Affairs spokesperson Navtej Sarna said: "The US had shared with India some weeks ago a preliminary draft agreement on Indo-US civil nuclear cooperation under Article 123 of the US Atomic Energy Act. In preliminary discussions on these elements, India conveyed to the US that such a provision has no place in the proposed bilateral agreement."

US inserted a clause that would end bilateral civil nuclear collaboration if India detonated a nuclear explosive device in its draft because of existing clauses in the US Atomic Energy and Arms Export Acts.

India made it clear it would not accept such a linkage in the 123 Agreement. India accepts it cannot do anything about US laws banning nuclear cooperation with any country that carries out a nuclear test, but will not accept them as part of a bilateral agreement. Foreign Secretary Shyam Saran noted last week on TV that they were not "India-specific".

 
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