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Australia looks positively at US-Indian nuclear deal

by Staff Writers
Perth, Australia (AFP) July 24, 2008
Australia is looking positively at a US-Indian civilian nuclear energy deal despite its policy of refusing to export uranium to India, Foreign Minister Stephen Smith said Thursday.

Smith told reporters travelling with him to Perth from Singapore that Australia would now have to make a decision on whether to support it, possibly by mid-August, now that the deal has survived in the Indian parliament.

"Our consideration of the India-US civil arrangement certainly won't lead to a change of policy so far as Australia's exports of uranium are concerned," Smith said aboard US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice's plane.

"Australia's position has been consistent throughout," he told the US-based reporters as he prepared to show Rice his hometown during an informal visit to western Australia.

"We only export uranium to those nation states who are parties to the nuclear non-proliferation treaty. India of course is not a party," Smith said.

But the deal to provide India with US nuclear technology is "separate from that," he added.

"And we don't regard our policy position on the export of uranium as preventing us from joining a consensus in the Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG) from supporting the arrangement," he said.

India needs to present the deal to the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) and to win the approval of the 45-nation NSG, of which Australia is a key member.

"What we've always said is that if and when the arrangement proceeded through the Indian parliament we would then give consideration to it at the appropriate time before the Nuclear Suppliers Group and the IAEA," he said.

Australia, the world's top uranium producer, is a strong advocate of non-proliferation.

"We've made the point to India and also to the United States that we will give very careful consideration to the strategic importance of the agreement both to India and to the United States," Smith said.

"And we're also looking at the arrangement with a positive and constructive frame of mind," he said.

"We of course want to look very carefully at the detail and consider that very carefully in the NSG but we don't regard in any way our longstanding party policy position on non-exportation of uranium as in any way standing between us and joining a consensus to support the arrangement," he said.

The agreement, unveiled in 2005, will allow the United States to sell nuclear plants and related technology to India once it has separated its civil and military programmes and accepted a certain level of UN inspections.

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Malaysia looking at building its first nuclear plant: report
Kuala Lumpur (AFP) July 22, 2008
Malaysian utility Tenaga may construct the country's first nuclear power plant at a cost of 3.1 billion dollars but is braced for objections from the public, a report said Tuesday.







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