

June 05, 1998 - Afternoon Transmission
The five permanent members of the UN Security Council have asked India
and Pakistan to have a direct dialogue to reduce tension in South Asia,
in a joint statement at the end of their three and a half hour meeting
in Geneva last night. They also urged New Delhi and Islamabad to refrain
from weaponisaton or deployment of nuclear weapons and adhere to the comprehensive
test ban tready immediately and unconditionally. Expressing their deep
concern about what they felt, the danger to peace and stability in the
region. The five nuclear powers also pledged to cooperate closely in urgent
efforts to prevent a nuclear and missile arms race in the sub continent.
The communique also called upon India and Pakistan to increase transparency
in their action. It said New Delhi and Islamabad should refrain from testing
and deployment of missiles capable of delivering nuclear weapons and further
production of fissile material for these. The declaration said India and
Pakistan do not have the status of nuclear weapon states in accordance
with the NPT notwithstanding their recent nuclear tests.
India says that it will closely examine the communique
issued by the big five power nations in Geneva. An External Affairs Ministry
spokesman said New Delhi will give its response after studying the declaration.
The Prime Minister says, there is no question of India
signing the comprehensive test ban treaty, CTBT, in its present form and
reiterated New Delhi's desire for global talks on nuclear disarmament.
Mr. Atal Behari Vajpayee told the Rajya Sabha that the nuclear issue is
not a bilateral matter between India and Pakistan but other countries are
also involved in it.
The Prime Minister made it clear again that India is ready to hold bilateral
talks with Pakistan and if Islamabad wants to raise the Kashmir issue,
New Delhi is ready to discuss it.
One of the scientists, who worked on America's first atomic
bomb, Mr. Joseph Rotblat has accused the nuclear powers of double standards.
Mr. Rotblat, who won the nobel peace prize for his compaigning against
the bomb said, the nuclear powers want themselves to keep the arms denying
such security to others. He said, such double standards cannot exist in
a civilised world.
The Indian Navy has detained 26 foreigners on board two
trawlers believed to be carrying weapons, explosives and ammunitions off
the Andaman Islands. Delayed reports say acting on a tip off, the navy
assisted by the coast guard, detected the trawlers about 360 kilometers
east of port blair on saturday afternoon. Sighting the naval units, almost
the entire crew of both the trawlers jumpted into the sea after destroying
the trawlers. Interrogation of the detained people confirmed that the trawlers
were carrying narcotics besides arms, ammunitation and explosives.
China has criticised the U.S. for posing a threat to its
security by arming Taiwan with sophisticated arms and technology. A Chinese
Foreign Ministry spokesman said in Beijing that Washington's decision to
sell equipment worth 160 million dollars to Taiwan is a threat to the sovereignty
and security of China.
The Prime Minister says, there is no question of India
signing the comprehensive test ban treaty, CTBT, in its present form and
reiterated New Delhi's desire for global talks on nuclear disarmament.
Mr. Atal Behari Vajpayee told the Rajya Sabha during question hours that
the nuclear issue is not a bilateral matter between India and Pakistan
but other countries are also involved in it. He said serious efforts are
not being made in the direction of nuclear disarmament and added that a
convention can be held in New York or elsewhere. The Prime Minister also
informed the members that India is being pressurised to sign the CTBT unconditionally
which New Delhi has not accepted. He said India is however willing to enter
into negotiations on CTBT. The pressure is mounting on US. India and Pakistan
are being told to sign the CTBT immediately and without conditions, we
have not agreed. We say we are willing to negotiate but there is no question
of agreeing to the CTBT in its present form.
Mr. Vajpayee reiterated that India is ready to hold bilateral talks
with Pakistan and if Islamabad wants to raise the Kashmir issue, we are
ready to discuss that also. He regretted that Pakistan has not responded
to India's proposal given at Dhaka SAARC summit for resolving pending issues
bilaterally. Mr. Vajpayee assured the members that India is not in the
arms race and its nuclear tests are not directed against their country.
India has declared that it does not seek a confrontation
with China. Responding to a query by newsmen, the External Affairs Ministry
spokesman said New Delhi seeks a relationship with China with both sides
responsive to each other's concerns. Rejecting President Jiang Zamid's
statement that India is a threat to Pakistan and China, the spokesman said
New Delhi remains committed to a dialogue with Beiging to resolve all outstanding
differences and also to develop friendly cooperation. He said India has
legitimate security concerns as there are nuclear weapons and missiles
in the regions.
Russia has made it clear that it stands for the resolution
of the Kashmir issue under the Shimla agreement. Kremlin sources say, the
reported three-point plan, put forward by Russian Foreign Minister, Yevgeny
Primakov, on the situation arising from the nuclear tests by India and
Pakistan, did not even mention Kashmir. The sources said, Moscow is against
internationalising any bilateral issue. Russian Deputy Foreign Minister,
Valery Nesteryushkin, while talking to newspersons last night, reaffirmed
Moscow's desire to prevent escalation of tension in the Indian sub-continent.
Pakistan is reportedly looking into the set of proposals
put forward by India for resumption of bilateral talks. INA telephonic
interview to an Indian TV News-Channel, Pakistan Foreign Minister Ghoar
Ayub Kahan said, Islamabad will soon seek a clarification from New Delhi
on certain points. After that the talks may get a boost, if everything
goes smoothly, he added. The set of proposals was made by India when the
them Prime Minister, Mr. I. K. Gujral, had met his Pakistani counter part
Nawaz Sharif at Dhaka.
India has again ruled out any third party mediation in
resolving the Kashmir issue. Responding to query on the Bangladesh Prime
Minister's reported offer for mediation, the External Affairs Ministry
spokesman said India's position on this issue has been made clear several
times earlier. The matter is a bilateral issue and therefore it has to
be resolved bilaterally.
A former Japanese Minister has criticised his country's
decision to slap economic sanctions against India for conducting nuclear
tests. The former Cabinet Affairs Minister, Mr. Seiroku Kajivama, a senior
ruling liberal democratic party leader, questioned Japan's decision and
expressed surprise at the Government's bling emulation of the United States
in imposing sanctions. He said, Tokyo has failed to appreciate India's
portest against the five big nuclear power's monopoly on the possession
of these weapons. The Former Minister said, Japan should agree with India
and demand the five declared nuclear power states to take immediate measures
to give up their own nuclear arms.