http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/nsg-plenary-session-nsg-delegation-heads-reconvene-to-discuss-indias-entry/article8767842.ece

SEOUL, June 24, 2016
Updated: June 24, 2016 14:14 IST

NSG plenary ends without movement in India's application

SUHASINI HAIDAR

Discussion was stuck on question of signing NPT, Pakistan "not even discussed"

The Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG) annual plenary session in Seoul
ended on Friday without making any significant movement on India’s
membership application.

The public statement released after the plenary does not mention the
names of any nations that have applied for membership.

The participating governments reiterated their firm support for the
full, complete and effective implementation of the NPT as the
cornerstone of the international non-proliferation regime, the
statement read.

The statement further mentioned, "The NSG had discussions on the issue
of “Technical, Legal and Political Aspects of the Participation of
non-NPT states in the NSG” and decided to continue its discussion."

The only mention of India in the statement was on "all the aspects of
the 2008 Statement on Civil Nuclear Cooperation with India and
discussed the NSG relationship with India."

China’s lead negotiator told journalists that the meeting had not
discussed India’s membership specifically as the NSG consensus was
“divided and far apart“ on the issue of admitting members who have not
signed the Non-Proliferation Treaty.

“The NPT is really an issue, because for admission the NSG has five
criteria for members, most noticeably the NPT, it is a must. This is
not a rule set by China, this is the rule set by the NSG and
reaffirmed by the international community,” Mr. Wang Qun told
journalists on Friday, after NSG members reconvened on Friday to
discuss the membership question that had kept them in talks till past
midnight on Thursday.

However, Indian officials rejected the Chinese contention that India’s
membership had not been brought on the agenda. “This was not some
hypothetical discussion. There are only two applicants from non-NPT
states this year, and only one of them, India’s case has been raised
by many members,” said a senior government source. Several diplomats
privy to the discussions also confirmed that the other applicant,
Pakistan, “was not even discussed.”

Mr. Wang denied reports that China had been isolated on the issue that
effectively keeps India out of the NSG for the present , saying that
“several countries” raised concerns during the special session.

“No China is not isolated,” Mr. Wang told The Hindu, “Firstly India’s
membership was not taken up. Also on the question of how to deal with
Non-NPT states, the group is divided, and far apart, and there are
many including some countries you mentioned , I do not want to name
them because of confidentiality rules at NSG, but their public
statements are not what the Indian media said they were. They
appreciated the efforts India has made for the NSG but in the meantime
hoped that its membership could be considered within the framework of
the NPT.”

Indian officials claimed the support of at least 32 nations of the
48-member NSG during the discussion of membership, but several nations
that had been expected to give their outright support did not do so
during deliberations. Sources say, in the biggest shock to Indian
efforts were the strong positions taken by Brazil and Switzerland,
despite the support they had assured India during diplomatic parleys.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi had even visited Switzerland this month,
where India had been assured support, but during the negotiations,
Switzerland is understood to have clarified that the larger issue of
NPT adherence must be considered.

Brazil too, spoke about the need for a “non-discriminatory criteria
based process” for admitting non-NPT members, sources said, even as
Ireland, Austria, New Zealand demanded that no members could be
considered until the NPT question was resolved. However diplomats
confirmed that at in its opening statement, Brazil had supported
India’s membership given its strong credentials.

Thursday's twists

A day earlier, diplomatic twists and turns were in constant play over
India’s hopes for a membership of NSG, and finally it ended stuck over
the question of the nuclear Non-Proliferation treaty (NPT), even as
the much-anticipated bilateral meeting between Prime Minister Narendra
Modi and President Xi Jinping in Tashkent ended without a statement of
support from China.

A source privy to the closed door consultations of Thursday told The
Hindu that although the membership application from India was now
specifically on the agenda of the meeting, “deliberations have not
moved beyond the NPT question, and we are yet to discuss India's case
specifically.”

[Video]

Modi, Xi Jinping meeting

The NSG members broke at about 6 p.m. on Thursday, agreeing to
reconvene post-dinner at 9 p.m. The development raised hopes for
Indian diplomats and the team in Seoul led by Foreign Secretary S.
Jaishankar, even as they waited for a positive message from the
meeting between Mr. Modi and Mr. Xi Jinping on the sidelines of the
SCO summit in Tashkent. However, while India stated its case to China,
there was no return statement from the Chinese government on its
stand.

“Prime Minister Modi urged China to make a fair and objective
assessment of India’s application and judge it on its own merits. He
said that China should contribute to the emerging consensus in Seoul,”
MEA spokesperson said, describing the meeting that went on for about
45 minutes and dwelt largely on the NSG question.

Shortly after, the Special session began in Seoul, and even though
India had received vocal support in intervention from at least 32
countries during the day, including US, Japan, France, Australia,
Germany, Canada, Hungary, and host South Korea, it became equally
clear that several countries were holding out on the question of how
to proceed forward for all Non-NPT countries, without making a special
exception for India.

-- 
Peace Is Doable

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