Showing posts with label summit. Show all posts
Showing posts with label summit. Show all posts

Kudankulam stalemate over, PM to discuss N-safety at Korea summit next week

HYDERABAD
20 MARCH 2012

Echoes of Kudankulam would be felt in distant Seoul next week when heads of state or
government from about 50 countries gather in the South Korean capital for the second
edition of the nuclear safety summit.

On their agenda will not only be nuclear safety but also the future of nuclear as an
energy source, post the Fukushima disaster in Japan in 2011.

While there is a strong popular sentiment against nuclear energy in Japan and a host of
other Asian nations, South Korea and India stand out as an exception where
governments have signalled their intention to pursue the nuclear power path.

The March 26-27 summit, which will be attended by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh,
Chinese President Hu Jintao and US President Barack Obama, among others, can be
expected to discuss issues such as guidelines for nuclear safety.

The US hosted the inaugural nuclear safety summit in 2010.

A week before Dr Singh leaves for Seoul, Tamil Nadu chief minister J Jayalalithaa ended
the eight-month-long uncertainty over the future of the Kudankulam nuclear power project
by giving her go ahead.

Work at the site had been affected by the protests by locals spearheaded by a People's
Movement Against Nuclear Energy, which feared a Fukushima-like catastrophe in
Kudankulam.

The decision to restart work at Kudankulam coincides with China's decision to resume
construction of nuclear power plants. China currently has 13 nuclear power plants with
varied capacities.

China suspended approving new nuclear power projects and launched nationwide safety
inspections at nuclear power stations and facilities in operation and under construction
over safety concerns after the Fukushima nuclear crisis.

According to state-run Beijing Review, China at present has approved 43 nuclear power
plants, with a planned capacity of 200 million KW. These plants are located in 16
provinces, including eight in inland areas.

Incidentally, South Korea is one country where Prime Minister should find himself at
ease. In a poll conducted by worldpublicopinion.org a few years ago, Dr Singh was voted
among the most popular "regional" leaders in South Korea with 47 per cent South Korean
nationals saying they trusted him more than others.

In the 20-country poll, 30 per cent of Chinese leaned positively towards Dr Singh
although the Chinese views of him had become more negative as compared to the
previous poll. He also enjoyed an overwhelming support (83 per cent) among Indians.

In contrast, Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari fared poorly on the confidence index. Only
34 per cent of the Pakistanis had confidence in him.

Indian prime minister Manmohan Singh to visit Iran despite regional tensions

Hyderabad
12 March 2012

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's much-anticipated visit to Iran this year can be expected to serve the dual purpose of maintaining India's ties with Iran on an even keel and kickstarting peace talks with Pakistan.

Tehran will host the 16th Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) summit in September.

His visit to the Iranian capital will, literally, be couched in nonalignment, coming as it will in the midst of a brewing crisis in West Asia, between Iran and Israel, and between the Shiite and Sunni blocs represented by Iran and Saudi Arabia, respectively.

It will follow the visits by external affairs minister SM Krishna to Israel, and defence minister AK Antony to Saudi Arabia. Also, it will be the first visit by an Indian premier to Iran in over a decade, after Atal Bihari Vajpayee's in 2001.

Prime Minister Singh's proposed visit to Tehran is being described as a manifestation of India's balanced and equitable relationships with various protagonists in the region. A broad-based relationship with the region is a welcome shift in policy, particularly after the narrow-minded pursuit of interests in the run-up to the signing of the India-US nuclear deal.

India and Pakistan are among the 120 members of the NAM. Besides interacting with the host, President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad of Iran, Prime Minister Singh is likely to re-engage his Pakistan counterpart, Yousuf Raza Gilani, on the margins of the summit.

The prime ministers of India and Pakistan last met in November 2011 on the sidelines of the Saarc summit in the Maldives. Incidentally, it was on the margins of the last NAM summit, hosted by Egypt in the Red Sea resort of Sharm-el-Sheikh in 2009, that prime ministers Singh and Gilani agreed to insulate the peace talks from "action on terrorism".

Prime Minister Singh will be hoping that peace with Pakistan will be his legacy, as India heads for elections in 2014. The Singh-Gilani talks will be preceded by Mr Krishna's visit to Islamabad.

The Asian Age, New Delhi



Deccan Chronicle, Bengaluru