NEW DELHI - The United States and India will resume talks on a landmark
nuclear energy cooperation deal which was passed by the US Senate last month, a
report said.
The United States and India will
resume talks on a landmark nuclear energy cooperation deal which was
passed by the US Senate last month, a report said. The US Under Secretary
of State Nicholas Burns, seen here in November 2006, is likely to arrive
in the Indian capital on 07 December 2006.[AFP]
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The US Under Secretary of State Nicholas Burns is likely to arrive in the
Indian capital December 7, a day after the joint session of the House of
Representatives and the Senate meets, the Press Trust of India reported.
Burns will hold talks with Shyam Saran, Indian pointman on the agreement
reached last year between the two countries during a visit here by US President
George W. Bush, it said.
The US official will also meet Indian Foreign Secretary Shiv Shankar Menon
for talks, the news agency quoted unnamed government officials as saying.
The agreement is the centrepiece of India's new relationship with Washington
after decades of Cold War chill and is part of the import-dependent nation's bid
to increase its energy sources to sustain its booming economy.
Nuclear power supplies around three percent of the fuel needs of the country
of more than one billion people, but India hopes the figure will rise to at
least 20 percent within two decades.
India's top official in the nuclear establishment, meanwhile, warned Delhi
will not do business in atomic energy with the US unless American lawmakers take
on board its concerns while finalising legislation linked to the deal.
"We expect all our concerns to be addressed and unless the US rules are
modified to take care of our country's interest, the business between the two
countries is not possible," Atomic Energy Commission Chairman Anil Kakodkar
said.
The military and sections of India's political establishment have expressed
fears the deal could hurt the defence capability of the country, which has
fought three wars with nuclear rival Pakistan.
The nuclear watchdog chief said the final legislation should address India's
requirements.
"The final legislation to be made by the US should be such that it is
acceptable to India if business has to be done with them -- as a real
cooperation," Kakodkar said in Mumbai, India's commercial capital.
The accord has been seen as controversial because the US Congress had to
exempt New Delhi from the requirements of the US Atomic Energy Act, which bans
nuclear sales to countries outside the Non Proliferation Treaty, such as India.
US weapons experts also warn that such a deal would make it harder to enforce
rules against nuclear renegades Iran and North Korea and set a dangerous
precedent for other nations with nuclear ambitions.