The Financial Express (Delhi Edition)

Mexico backs Indian bid to join top nuclear club

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MEXICO supports India’s efforts to join the Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG), President Enrique Pena Nieto said on Wednesday, in a boost for Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s diplomatic push to end his country’s isolation over its nuclear arms programme.

“Mexico recognises India’s interest in joining the Nuclear Suppliers Group,” Pena Nieto said, with Modi at his side at the Mexican president’s Los Pinos residence. “As a country we have a positive and constructi­ve backing for this.”

India is also poised to join the Missile Technology Control Regime (MTCR) after talks this week between Modi and US President Barack Obama in Washington.

Both groups would give India greater access to research and technology, but China has so far blocked India´s accession to the NSG.

Mexico supported India’s membership because of Modi’s “commitment to the agenda of nuclear disarmamen­t and non-proliferat­ion”, Pena Nieto said.

New Delhi’s bid for full membership, if granted, would tip the balance of power in South Asia against its arch-rival Pakistan, whose own applicatio­n has been backed by China, despite questions over its proliferat­ion record.

Pena Nieto’s support is a boost for Modi, but he must still win China’s support to seal India’s membership of the non-proliferat­ion body. The NSG holds its annual meeting in South Korea later this month.

“I thank President Pena Nieto for his positive and constructi­ve support for India’s membership of the Nuclear Suppliers Group ,” Mo di said at the end of a whirlwind week of global diplomacy in which he also won support from Switzerlan­d.

Mexico’s backing represents a historic policy shift for the country, which has held a firm position on nuclear disarmamen­t and non-proliferat­ion for decades.

One of Mexico’s crowning diplomatic achievemen­ts was the 1967 Treaty of Tlatelolco, which declared Latin America and the Caribbean a zone free of nuclear weapons.

India made its formal bid for membership last month after winning a waiver in 2008 allowing it to trade in commercial nuclear technology.

Modi tacked on Switzerlan­d and Mexico as extra stops on a five-country tour to seek their support.

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