This article was first published 16 years ago

Russia says 'nothing prevented' Kudankulam atomic power deal

Share:

January 16, 2008 16:47 IST

Russia has said that 'nothing prevented' it from going ahead with the sale of four reactors to India for the Kudankulam atomic power plant within the framework of their current international obligations and was ready to sign the deal whenever it suited New Delhi.

"Nothing prevented Russia and India from signing a four-reactor accord within the framework of their international obligations," Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov said, avoiding a question whether it could be signed during Russian prime minister Viktor Zubkov's New Delhi visit in February.

The crucial nuclear deal on the construction of four more additional reactors for the nuclear power plant in Tamil Nadu was due to be signed in Moscow in November 2007 during Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's Moscow visit.

However, it was cancelled at the last minute, apparently due to New Delhi's reluctance to enter a bilateral deal before it got a waiver from the Nuclear Suppliers Group and signed an India-specific safeguards agreement with the International Atomic Energy Agency.

"We are ready to sign the nuclear agreement any time it suits India," Lavrov told PTI at a New Year reception hosted by him for the foreign press.

Lavrov stressed that Moscow is willing to 'go as far as India was willing and ready for' civilian nuclear cooperation and added that it could be done within the framework of its international obligations.

Although, starting from the previous Vajpayee government, New Delhi has been pressing Moscow to support India's quest for lifting civilian nuclear technology denial regime by providing additional reactors, the apparent U-turn by the United Progressive Allince government was seen by Russia as pro-United States drift.

Get Rediff News in your Inbox:
Share: