Australia not moved by India's repeated pleas on Uranium

KhanHaripur

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
MELBOURNE: Australia today refused to concede to India's repeated requests for revoking a ban on Uranium sale to it, saying Canberra remains steadfast on its policy of not selling the yellow metal to NPT non-signatories .
External Affairs Minister S M Krishna raised the issue of Uranium sale with Australia for a second day during his meeting with his Australian counterpart Kevin Rudd but the latter said his country's stand remains unchanged.
He had yesterday taken up the issue with Australia's Resource, Energy and Tourism Minister Martin Ferguson.
Rudd said "Australia fundamentally respects India's long standing credentials on the non-proliferation question".
"Something which we place on record again as being our views of India's public policy posture and operational behaviour for a very long period of time," he said.
Australia is unwilling to sell uranium to India because it has not signed the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.
There is a huge amount underway in the Australia-India relationship at the political, security and economic levels... There's sufficient ballast in this relationship to deal with areas of periodic disagreement as there are in all relationships," he said.
Commenting on the issue, Krishna said he has pleaded with the Australian government to change the policy, stressing that nuclear energy as a clean energy source was crucial to the rising energy demands of India.
"If you have to have clean energy, then according to India the only option is to have nuclear energy, and if you have to have nuclear energy, then you certainly need uranium," he said.
On the question of the security of Indian students in Australia, Rudd gave his full assurance to his counterpart.
He said as the Foreign Minister he takes the issue of security of any guest including international students 'fundamentally and seriously'.
"I take the responsibility and that is our job," he said after holding the seventh ministerial dialogue with Krishna at a joint press conference here today.


http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/politics/nation/australia-not-moved-by-indias-repeated-pleas-on-uranium/articleshow/7325469.cms
 

only_truths

Minister (2k+ posts)
source: NetIndian News Network


New Delhi, January 20, 2011


20110120Kr2.jpg

External Affairs Minister S. M. Krishna with Australian Foreign Minister Kevin Rudd at Melbourne on January 20, 2011.

External Affairs Minister S M Krishna today told Australia, which has refused to sell uranium to India, that the strategic partnership between the two countries would not reach its full potential without some progress being made in the area of nuclear energy.
"While the relationship is progressing well, I think it is important to realize that the strategic partnership will not reach its full potential without some progress being made in the area of nuclear energy," Mr Krishna said in his opening remarks at the Seventh India-Australia Ministers' Framework Dialogue in Melbourne.

unquote:
"I would be interested in hearing from you, at some point today, on how you see the issue evolving in Australia over the next few months," Krishna told his Australian counterpart Kevin Rudd.

If not today, Australia will eventually sell uranium to India as this will be on the pretext of international safe guards.
 
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