Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

India seeks Moscow’s help in new bid to enter nuclear club India, Pak to resume Indus water parleys

- Jayanth Jacob jayanth.jacob@gmail.com Imtiaz Ahmad letters@hindustant­imes.com

LOBBY FOR NSG India expects Russia to push its membership bid for the elite group

Foreign secretary Vijay Gokhale visited Russia last week to follow up on Prime Minister Narendra Modi and President Vladimir Putin’s informal summit in May and to lobby for India’s Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG) membership.

NSG is an elite club of countries that deals with the trade in nuclear technology and fissile materials. India is making a renewed bid for getting NSG membership. It expects Moscow to help India get it.

The 48-member NSG works on the principle of consensus for admitting new members.

India has not signed the Non Proliferat­ion Treaty (NPT) for an entry into the group.

But New Delhi has maintained it has impeccable non-proliferat­ion credential­s that had enabled the country to get a waiver from the grouping to operationa­lise the India-US nuclear deal and get into nuclear commerce.

Therewasno­Indianstat­ement on Gokhale’s visit on August 24. But Russians said deputy foreign minister Sergey Ryabkov held consultati­ons with him in Moscow. “The officials discussed the main multilater­al export control regimes, including the Nuclear Suppliers Group, cooperatio­n in the framework of BRICS and other topical issues of mutual interest on the internatio­nal agenda,’’ a Russian statement said. The NSG is the only major export control regime India is not part of. India became a part of the Australia Group in January 2018, the Missile Technology Control Regime in June 2016 and the Wassenaar Arrangemen­t in December 2017. Putin is expected to meet Modi in October for their annual summit. India is expected to take up the NSG membership with the US again during the two plus two dialogue between foreign and defence ministers of the two countries on September 6.

“The issue of getting NSG membership is an important issue for the government. Becoming member of the export control regimes remained the Modi government’s key foreign policy priority,” said an official. “We are now part of three out three export control regimes. That says a lot about India’s non-proliferat­ion track record as well.”

Experts said the improvemen­t in India-China ties could change Beijing’s stance against India’s NSG membership.

“There has been a perceptibl­e change in the bilateral ties after Modi’s meeting with President Xi Jinping in Wuhan on April 27 and 28. So if China withdraws its objection, India could be a member of NSG,” said former foreign secretary Lalit Mansingh.

Pakistan is expected to raise objections to two water storage and hydropower projects being built by India at the upcoming meeting of the Permanent Indus Commission to be held in Lahore this week.

The meeting will also be the first, between both the countries, since the new government headed by Prime Minister Imran Khan assumed office.

Unnamed officials were quoted by the media saying that Pakistan will raise concerns over the constructi­on of 1,000-MW Pakal Dul and 48-MW Lower Kalnai projects at the two-day talks beginning on Wednesday.

An official told Dawn newspaper that Pakistan will raise its concerns over the constructi­on of the projects on the two tributarie­s of the Chenab river despite Islamabad’s objections to their designs.

Pakistan wants India to modify the designs to make them comply with the Indus Waters Treaty of 1960 or put the projects on hold until New Delhi “satisfies” Islamabad, the report said.

The official said the two sides will also finalise the schedule for future meetings.

The water commission­ers of both India and Pakistan are required to meet twice a year and coordinate technical visits to project sites and critical river headworks.

The two-day session is expected to discuss ways for timely and smooth sharing of hydrologic­al data on the rivers shared by both the countries.

Pakistan has alleged that India began work on the Pakal Dul project in May without addressing its reservatio­ns.

The project is expected to be completed in 66 months.

Islamabad has objections to the pondage and freeboard of the Lower Kalnai project and pondage, filling criteria and spillway of the Pakal Dul project.

Pakal Dul is a storage-cumpower project and can have a gross storage of about 108,000 acre feet of water.

Under the Indus Waters Treaty, waters of the eastern rivers Sutlej, Beas and Ravi were allocated to India, while the western rivers Indus, Jhelum and Chenab to Pakistan.Islamabad believes the Pakal Dul project’s reservoir violates the Indus treaty and had registered its objections at the last meeting of the Permanent Indus Commission held in New Delhi in March.

Union health minister JP Nadda on Monday said a unique quick response (QR) code will be sent to selected families on September 5 that will allow them to avail an annual cashless health insurance cover under the Ayushman Bharat-Pradhan Mantri Jan Arogya Yojna (AB-PMJAY).

“The government is in the process of identifyin­g beneficiar­ies at the moment and we have covered 85% of the rural population and 60% of the urban population. It is an ongoing process so we will continue till we have all beneficiar­ies covered,” said Nadda who also launched the logo of the scheme.

Ayushman Bharat-Pradhan Mantri Jan Arogya Yojna (AB-PMJAY), popularly known as Modicare, provides cashless health insurance cover of ~5 lakh per family, per year, for hospitalis­ation to almost 10.74 crore poor and vulnerable families.

Under the scheme, which will be launched on September 25, the beneficiar­ies will start getting insurance cover, three days prior to hospitalis­ation and for 15 days after discharge . Each empanelled hospital will have a nodal person, Pradhan Mantri Arogya Mitra.

The scheme covers 1354 packages, from more than 20 specialiti­es. Nadda also announced antifraud guidelines to prevent, detect and deter fraud at any level. “We have ensured a strict data protection mechanism that has 94 control tools at various levels that are based on internatio­nal best practices and tweaked according to India-specific regulation­s.The data and informatio­n is absolutely secure,” he said.

Twenty-nine states have signed up for the scheme, and five states—Kerala, Delhi, Punjab, Karnataka and Tamil Nadu— are likely to sign up within a week.

“Different states have different premium quotations as of now... from Nagaland’s ~ 444 to Chhattisga­rh’s ~1060 per year,” said Indu Bhushan, CEO, Ayushman Bharat. Nadda said the scheme will help to create jobs in health and insurance sector.

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