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Mongolian President arrives in Delhi on four-day visit |
Mongolian President Tsakhiagiin Elbegdorj arrived
in New Delhi on Sunday afternoon on a four-day state visit to India. President
Elbegdorj will commence his official visit to India from Monday. On the first
day, he will meet External Affairs Minister S.M. Krishna; have delegation level
talks with the Prime Minister, Dr. Manmohan Singh; meet Vice-President Mohammad
Hamid Ansari, Leader of Opposition L.K. Advani and call on his Indian counterpart
Pratibha Devisingh Patil. On Tuesday, he will visit Agra, Gaya and Mumbai. On
Wednesday, he is expected to meet and interact with captains of Indian industry
in Mumbai and is likely to pitch Mongolia as an attractive investment destination.
He will leave for Mongolian capital Ulan Batter the same evening. The governments
of the two countries are expected to sign a civil nuclear agreement, besides ink
bilateral pacts on health and statistics. India may also sanction a stabilization
loan to Mongolia. This is President Elbegdorj''s first official visit abroad after
assuming office in June 2009, indicating the importance that Mongolia attaches
to its relations with India. Mongolia which boasts of having nearly six percent
of the world's uranium reserves. Mongolia is not a member of 45-nation Nuclear
Suppliers Group (NSG), but is affiliated to the Vienna-headquartered International
Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) and last year supported India's bid for a "clean waiver"
on conducting civil nuclear trade internationally notwithstanding the fact that
New Delhi is not a signatory to the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty (CTBT) or the
Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT). Nuclear experts in India point out that
Mongolia''s huge uranium reserves could boost and energize the country's starving
civil nuclear fuel cycle. Mongolia''s proposed decision to supply uranium to India
assumes greater significance in the wake of Australia's reluctance to do so. Australia,
which has the world''s largest uranium reserves, has time and again signaled that
it cannot supply uranium to India until the latter signs the NPT. The Group of
Eight (G-8) countries - The United States, the United Kingdom, France, Russia,
Canada, Germany, Italy and Japan - at their last meeting in Italy, moved and approved
a resolution to controversially prevent non-signatories of the NPT from accessing
enrichment and reprocessing technology. Experts believe the supply of uranium
is more crucial for India than access to enrichment and reprocessing technology.
India started reprocessing in 1964 and is enriching its fuel since the 1970''s
and has a full fuel cycle. Mongolia recently signed an inter-governmental agreement
with Russia to establish a joint venture to develop, produce and process uranium.
If the atomic energy agreement with India is inked during the Mongolian President's
visit, India will become the second country to have uranium-linked cooperation
with the Eurasian nation, the other being China. |
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