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US keen on implementation of Indo-US n-deal
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SME Times News Bureau | 24 Jan, 2013
US Secretary John Kerry made a strong pitch for India and the US
cooperating in clean energy and said the US is keen on implementing the
Indo-US civil nuclear deal "as soon as possible".
Describing
India as a nation that would soon become the most populous and the third
largest economy in the world, Kerry touched on defence cooperation,
India-Pakistan relations, on Afghanistan, the contributions of the
Indian American community and also on the Delhi gang-rape victim and the
street protests in his over 40-minute speech at the India Habitat
Centre.
He described India as an "ever changing place" and that both sides have to move together with the current.
Beginning
his address on US-India Strategic Partnership with a "Namastey", Kerry
also offered condolences for the Uttarakhand flood devastation deaths
and said it was a pointer to how climate change could affect the world.
He said India should tap the new clean energy market worth $6 billion which would also help create new jobs.
He
made a forceful pitch for India and Pakistan to boost economic ties and
said it could be the harbinger of a "new era of ties" between the
neighbours and help bring in "a level of trust".
Kerry, who
arrived earlier in the day on a three-day visit, said he welcomed the
increase of "21 percent" in India-Pakistan trade.
He said if
India and Pakistan can "confidently invest in each other then the rest
of the world will more confidently invest in you".
On the Indo-US civil nuclear deal, he said the US "looks forward" to realising its implementation "as soon as possible".
"That
agreement demonstrates our mutual confidence of our strategic
partnership", he said, and added that "We look forward to realising its
full implementation as soon as possible" including in the efforts of
Westinghouse to construct nuclear power plants in India.
Kerry
also reiterated that the US backs India's inclusion as a permanent
member of a reformed and expanded UN Security Council and as a member of
the four multilateral export control regimes (the Nuclear Suppliers
Group, Missile Technology Control Regime, Australia Group, and Wassenaar
Arrangement).
A day before his meeting with Indian External
Affairs Minister Salman Khurshid on the Indo-US strategic dialogue, he
said the US is looking for "co-production and co-development in defence
systems".
He said India will "soon have more C-17s" Globemaster aircraft than any country in the world, even more than the US itself.
Elaborating
on India's role in its security vision for the Asian region, he said
"India is a key part of the US rebalance in Asia and we are committed to
that rebalance".
He said that India-US security interests are
based on "a wide range of maritime and broader regional issues" and the
US "values India's role in our mutual efforts to ensure a stable and
prosperous Asia".
Praising India's constructive role in
Afghanistan, Kerry suggested that India could also paly a crucial role
in the Afghan 2014 elections.
"India can play a critical role in
supporting these elections," he said, adding that New Delhi could help
"Afghanistan in improving the electoral system in creating a credible
and independent framework for resolving disputes".
He also sought
to clear the air on proposed talks with the Taliban, which India has
stressed should be "Afghan-led and Afghan-owned".
Kerry said:
"Let me be clear, any political settlement has to be on the Taliban
breaking ties with the Al Qaeda, renouncing violence and accepting the
Afghan constitution, including its protection for all Afghan woman and
men."
He said that Afghanistan "cannot again become a safe haven
for international terrorism" and the US is committed to countering
terrorism in that country where the US-led forces are set to drawdown
next year.
India has said that it has "reservations" about the
Taliban and it would support "an Afghan-led and Afghan-owned" peace
initiative.
He mentoned Nirbhaya, the Delhi gang-rape victim, and the massive protests against her brutal rape, in his speech.
He
said women and men should strive as equals. And when "inequalities or
violence seeks to stamp out equality as with the tragic death of
Nirbhaya, whose memory I was proud to honour at the State Department
recently; We must all stand up and say 'No', just as so many did in New
Delhi by demanding justice."
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Indian hunger for nuclear deal starving indians
Tania | Wed Jul 24 07:16:33 2013
Don’t know why our country is so hungry to have a nuclear deal with India. On the other hand, hunger is prevalent all over in our country. People are dying with hunger and our government is feeding itself with nuclear power and trade. Paying no heed on internal dilemmas which are weakening the statehood and patriotism for India.
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