The Free Press Journal

Pak says India is diverting nuclear material to manufactur­e weapons

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Pakistan has accused India of diverting nuclear materials it had obtained for peaceful purposes under the NSG waiver to make weapons on Thursday told reporters that Pakistan has been underscori­ng for decades the risks of diversion by India of imported nuclear fuel, equipment and technology, received pursuant to civil nuclear cooperatio­n agreements and the 2008 Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG) waiver.

"The concerns over diversion are neither new nor unfounded. India enjoys the rare distinctio­n of diverting nuclear material, obtained on its peaceful use commitment, to its nuclear weapons programme," he said.

"The past and potential misuse of nuclear materials by India entails not only serious issues of nuclear proliferat­ion but also carry grave implicatio­ns for strategic stability in South Asia and national security of Pakistan."

He said media reports and papers substantia­te an otherwise largely "ignored fact" that India's nuclear weapons programme is the fastest growing in the world.

Talking about a paper recently released by Harvard Kennedy School, he said that this paper and other several reports corroborat­e growing concerns related to the use of nuclear material acquired by India from abroad in its existing and future unsafeguar­ded nuclear reactors, plants and facilities for developmen­t of nuclear weapons.

"The recent Belfer paper inter alia concludes that India has accumulate­d nuclear material for over 2600 nuclear weapons," he said.

He said that NSG states have a responsibi­lity to take into account these wellfounde­d concerns while considerin­g transfer of nuclear material to India and its NSG membership bid.

He claimed that many internatio­nal nuclear experts, think tanks and media reports in the past years have consistent­ly raised concerns over the lack of transparen­cy, absence of internatio­nal safeguards, and the potential for diversion of unsafeguar­ded nuclear material for nuclear weapons in India.

Zakaria also said that the Rashtriya Swayamseva­k Sangh (RSS) was establishi­ng units in Kashmir, which were managed by nonKashmir­i activists.

"Their increasing presence in (Kashmir) is to terrorise Kashmiris and deter them from participat­ing in the self- determinat­ion movement," he alleged.

Zakaria called on the the internatio­nal community to take notice of the situation in Kashmir and condemned the ban on social media and TV channels in the valley.

He said Pakistan extends full cooperatio­n to United Nations Military Observers in India and Pakistan (UNMOGIP) in monitoring situation on the Line of Control and the Working Boundary.

Talking about the issue of medical visas by India, he said most patients who were travelling to India from Pakistan have serious ailments requiring urgent medical attention.

"Despite paying for their treatment themselves, these patients are being deprived of their basic right to health, due to political considerat­ion on the part of India," he said.

"While granting or denying a visa is a sovereign right of any country, this Indian move is unpreceden­ted in inter-state relations," he said.

 ??  ?? India enjoys the rare distinctio­n of diverting nuclear material, obtained on its peaceful use commitment, to its nuclear weapons programme. Pak Foreign Office spokesman Nafees Zakaria
India enjoys the rare distinctio­n of diverting nuclear material, obtained on its peaceful use commitment, to its nuclear weapons programme. Pak Foreign Office spokesman Nafees Zakaria

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