December 05, 2010

Sarkozy for India in UNSC

Shubhadeep Choudhury & Shiv Kumar
Tribune News Service

Bangalore/Mumbai, December 4

http://www.tribuneindia.com/2010/20101205/main1.htm

India’s bid for a permanent seat in the United Nations Security Council and its candidacy for the Nuclear Suppliers Group today got vocal support from French President Nicolas Sarkozy, who described India as a “stabilising factor in Asia”.

Sarkozy did not explicitly call Pakistan an “exporter of terror” — a remark that British Prime Minister David Cameroon made during his visit to Bangalore earlier this year — but expressed concern over the use of Pakistan’s soil for terror acts beyond its borders.

Addressing a gathering at the ISRO Satellite Centre in Bangalore, Sarkozy said, “Pakistan and Afghanistan are a major source of terror… We need a stable, democratic and prosperous Pakistan that is fully engaged in the fight against terrorism and determined to prevent its territory from serving as a base for terrorist acts, regardless of the country targeted.”

The French President said the recent election of India to the Security Council for two years should serve as the prelude for the permanent Indian presence within the UN Security Council. “How could a country with one billion people be left out of the Security Council?” he said.

Sarkozy, who reached Bangalore this morning with his glamorous wife Carla Bruni and French officials and business representatives to kick off his second visit to India, said the UN Security Council must also be enlarged by the inclusion of Germany, Japan, Brazil and an African and an Arab country.

“What is at stake here is the UN’s ability to respond to 21st century crisis using 21st century instruments. It is a matter of realism,” he said.

Lauding India’s role in social and economic development programmes in war-ravaged Afghanistan, Sarkozy said the opening of Afghanistan’s economy, the fight against drug trafficking and the establishment of a secure regional environment demanded the cooperation of all Afghanistan’s neighbours. “India must assume its full role (in Afghanistan) in the process,” he said.

The French President extended full support to India’s civil-nuclear programme. He said nuclear energy would now form the focus of Indo-French cooperation. Noting that 80 per cent of France’s electricity requirement was met though nuclear power plants, Sarkozy said France’s decision to rely on nuclear energy had proved visionary and ensured its energy independence.

Notably, Sarkozy would reach Mumbai on Tuesday along with a high-powered delegation comprising around 60 CEOs of top companies from his country. Those part of his delegation include officials of companies like Dassault, EADS and Areva, who are looking to sign multi-million dollar contracts with Indian firms, according to industry bodies here.

The biggest deal that Sarkozy is expected to oversee is the signing of the agreement between French nuclear equipment major Areva and the Nuclear Power Corporation (NCP) of India. As per the agreement between the two countries, Areva is to build two European pressurised reactors (EPR) for NPC’s nuclear power complex scheduled to be built at Jaitapur in Maharashtra’s Ratnagiri district.

From two plants initially, the complex will have six nuclear reactors by 2030. The other big deal to be signed between the two sides is a $1.2 billion contract to refurbish 56 Mirage 2000 aircraft of the Indian Air Force.

Dassault is the frontrunner for the deal, according to French trade officials here.

In Mumbai itself, the groundwork is being done for the signing of deals worth hundreds of crores of rupees.

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