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THE NR EYE: Opening PN route will boost NRI investments
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  Nine Nights of Dance & Devotion
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  DWarka: Lord krishna's temporal kingdom
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Australian Foreign Minister visits India


The Minister for Foreign Affairs of Australia, Mr. Stephen Smith meeting with the Vice President, Shri Mohd. Hamid Ansari, in New Delhi on September 12, 2008.

Australian Minister for Foreign Affairs, H.E. Stephen Smith was on a  visit to India from Sept. 8-12, 2008. His official visit to India was at the invitation of External Affairs Minister. Mr. Smith became the Minister for Foreign Affairs in the new Labour Government in Australia which came to power in Dec. 2007. Mr. Smith along with his delegation visited Chennai, (Sept 8-9) Hyderabad (Sept. 9-10) and New Delhi (Sept. 11-12). His visit was intended to diversify and consolidate the traditionally warm and friendly relations between India and Australia.

This was Mr. Smith's first visit to India, and a stand-alone visit, that follows External Affairs Minister's visit to Canberra in June, 2008 for the fourth meeting of the Foreign Ministers’ Framework Dialogue. (The last visit by an Australian Foreign Minister to India was in June 2005 by Mr. Alexander Downer).During the visit Mr. Smith met the Governor and the Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu in Chennai and in Hyderabad the Chief Minister of Andhra Pradesh and other Ministers of the Andhra Government.

 

In New Delhi, Mr. Smith called on Prime Minister and held wide ranging talks on issues of mutual interest with External Affairs Minister who also hosted an official lunch for him. In addition, Mr. Smith called on the Vice President and met Finance Minister, MOS (AS) for External Affairs and the National Security Adviser. He also delivered  a lecture on India-Australia relations at ICWA. Mr. Smith’s visit underlines the desire of both sides to raise the level of bilateral relations to a significantly higher level.

India and Australia have several commonalities which serve as a basis for closer cooperation and multifaceted interaction in various fields. Bilateral trade has increased three-fold since 2002 to USD 10.2 bn (A$ 10.8 bn) in 2007. Australia is India’s 10th largest while India is Australia’s 9th largest trading partner. In the context of India’s ‘Look East Policy’, Australia-India cooperation is an important and growing element, contributing to the evolution of the regional architecture under the East Asia Summit process.

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Joint Statement on the visit of Australian Foreign Minister Mr Stephen Smith to New Delhi

The Indian External Affairs Minister, Hon’ble Pranab Mukherjee, and Australian Minister for Foreign Affairs, the Hon’ble Stephen Smith met in New Delhi and discussed bilateral, regional and international issues of mutual interest and importance. The discussions covered a wide-range of subjects, reflecting the increasingly close ties between India and Australia. India-Australia relations have significantly grown in the recent years encompassing greater political, economic, defence and scientific fields, and people-to-people cooperation. Recognising the importance of close and mutually beneficial relations between the two important countries in their respective regions, both Ministers agreed to take the level of relations to a “strategic partnership” and work towards the objective.

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PM Manmohan Singh visits US and France


India's prime minister was on a 10-day visit to the United States and France. During his visit, Dr Manmohan Singh also attend the UN General Assembly in New York and an India-EU gathering in Marseilles.


In New York, Dr Singh met world leaders including Pakistan's newly elected President Asif Ali Zardari and Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao. On September 25, he was in Washington to sign a bilateral accord allowing India to buy nuclear power plants, technology and fuel. The deal is expected to be a milestone in warming ties between the United States and India, a former Soviet ally.

New Delhi, which is critically short of energy to fuel its booming economy, is looking at investments worth billions of dollars in its power sector. Signed by US President George W Bush and Dr Singh in July 2005, has gotten the final approval from US Congress.

Statement by External Affairs Minister of India Shri Pranab Mukherjee on the Civil Nuclear Initiative

To reiterate India’s stand on disarmament and nonproliferation, EAM has made the following statement:

A Plenary meeting of the Nuclear Suppliers Group to consider an exception for India from its guidelines to allow for full civil nuclear cooperation with India is being held in Vienna from September 4 – 5, 2008. India has a long-standing and steadfast commitment to universal, non-discriminatory and total elimination of nuclear weapons. The vision of a world free of nuclear weapons which Shri Rajiv Gandhi put before the UN in 1988 still has universal resonance.

We approach our dialogue with the Nuclear Suppliers Group and all its members in a spirit of cooperation that allows for an ongoing frank exchange of views on subjects of mutual interest and concern. Such a dialogue will strengthen our relationship in the years to come. Our civil nuclear initiative will strengthen the international non-proliferation regime.

India believes that the opening of full civil nuclear cooperation will be good for India and for the world. It will have a profound positive impact on global energy security and international efforts to combat climate change.

India has recently submitted a Working Paper on Nuclear Disarmament to the UN General Assembly, containing initiatives on nuclear disarmament. These include the reaffirmation of the unequivocal commitment of all nuclear weapon States to the goal of complete elimination of nuclear weapons; negotiation of a Convention on the complete prohibition of the use or threat of use of nuclear weapons; and negotiation of a Nuclear Weapons Convention prohibiting the development, production, stockpiling and use of nuclear weapons and on their destruction, leading to the global, non-discriminatory and verifiable elimination of nuclear weapons within a specified timeframe.

We remain committed to a voluntary, unilateral moratorium on nuclear testing. We do not subscribe to any arms race, including a nuclear arms race. We have always tempered the exercise of our strategic autonomy with a sense of global responsibility. We affirm our policy of no-first-use of nuclear weapons.

We are committed to work with others towards the conclusion of a multilateral Fissile Material Cut-off Treaty in the Conference on Disarmament that is universal, non-discriminatory and verifiable. India has an impeccable non-proliferation record. We have in place an effective and comprehensive system of national export controls, which has been constantly updated to meet the highest international standards.

This is manifested in the enactment of the Weapons of Mass Destruction and their Delivery Systems Act in 2005. India has taken the necessary steps to secure nuclear materials and technology through comprehensive export control legislation and through harmonization and committing to adhere to Missile Technology Control Regime and Nuclear Suppliers Group guidelines.

India will not be the source of proliferation of sensitive technologies, including enrichment and reprocessing transfers. We stand for the strengthening of the non-proliferation regime. We support international efforts to limit the spread of ENR equipment or technologies to states that do not have them. We will work together with the international community to advance our common objective of non-proliferation. In this regard, India is interested in participating as a supplier nation, particularly for Thorium-based fuel and in establishment of international fuel banks, which also benefit India.



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