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This is an archive article published on January 13, 2008

Informal NSG waiver likely before March

Ahead of a key meeting between India and IAEA on a safeguards agreement for the implementation of the Indo-US civil nuclear deal...

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Ahead of a key meeting between India and IAEA on a safeguards agreement for the implementation of the Indo-US civil nuclear deal, the 45-member NSG is apparently optimistic about giving waiver to New Delhi before March to allow nuclear commerce with it.

It is learnt that even countries like Switzerland and New Zealand, which had been resisting the move, had come around, softened their stand and in fact were working towards making a written draft on the exemption to enable trade in nuclear material and technology with India.

The Nuclear Suppliers’ Group members, who met here last week, were optimistic about completing the process of giving waiver to India without much opposition before March, sources said.

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The draft paper on exemption to India by NSG was a crucial step towards operationalisation of the Indo-US deal, they said.

India has been demanding a “clean and unconditional” exemption from NSG.

Meanwhile, India and the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA ) are working towards readying an “agreed text” of the India-specific safeguards at a meeting next week here.

The Indian team will be leaving for Vienna on January 16 and, according to the External Affairs Ministry, this consultative meeting could possibly be the final one.

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“(It is) Possibly the final round. The draft has to be discussed by the UPA-Left committee in India and should be ready to be placed before the Board of governors of IAEA in March,” IAEA sources said.

India has said it hopes to wrap up the safeguards agreement with IAEA later this month before approaching the NSG.

“We hope to do another round (of negotiations) in the middle of January in Vienna. We hope to wrap it up”, Foreign Secretary Shivshankar Menon told reporters in New Delhi on Friday.

Only when IAEA prepares a final agreed text which has to be cleared by its Board of Governors, the US could go ahead with its talks with the 45-member NSG to get a clean and unconditional exemption for India to do nuclear commerce.

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Once the IAEA agreed text and the draft on waiver for India by NSG, one of the pre-requisites for operationalisation of the deal first mooted in July 2005, are ready, they have to be finally approved by the US Congress.

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