Pakistan in spotlight at Washington nuclear summit

ISLAMABAD, April 11 (Reuters) – Pakistan will confront its reputation as a proliferator head-on this week when its prime minister addresses a global summit in Washington aimed at keeping nuclear weapons out of the hands of terrorists.

Arch-rival India and other critics could however undercut Pakistan by reminding the world of its nuclear smuggling, highlighting the Taliban insurgency and fanning fears of a Muslim country in chaos where militants could seize atomic material.

“India will demand restrictions imposed on Pakistan’s nuclear programme,” said Shahid-ur-Rehman, a Pakistani journalist and author of “Long Road to Chagai”, a book on Pakistan’s nuclear programme.

“Their main stress will be on securing Pakistan’s nuclear assets by the world,” he told Reuters.

“Pakistan’s efforts will be to counter that and convince them that our National Command Authority, which oversees the country’s strategic assets, is very effective and that our nuclear assets are safe and secure.”

Pakistani Prime Minister Yusuf Raza Gilani will speak at the summit after meeting President Barack Obama on Sunday. There are no plans for Gilani and his Indian counterpart, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, to meet, although the leaders of the nuclear-armed rivals may have a brief “encounter”.

Obama called the Nuclear Security Summit to reach a common understanding on the threat posed by nuclear terrorism and an agreement on steps to secure all loose nuclear material within four years to stop it falling into the hands of groups such as al Qaeda.

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton says the April 12-13 gathering of 47 nations is possibly the largest assembly of world leaders in the United States since 1945.

Two countries not on the guest list are Iran and North Korea, both of which are locked in their own nuclear standoffs with the West. And both countries have allegedly benefited from the smuggling network of Abdul Qadeer Khan, the father of Pakistan’s nuclear bomb and a national hero. ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ (For full coverage of Pakistan click on [ID:nAFPAK] ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

PRESSURE

It is this history — and Pakistan’s uncertain future — that has put the country’s nuclear programme in the spotlight this week. Experts say Pakistan’s arsenal and stockpile of weapons-grade material represent the area of greatest risk, because of huge internal security threats from the Taliban and al Qaeda.

“Because of Pakistan’s so-called past, that there was proliferation from Pakistan and that Pakistani scientists had met Osama bin Laden … there will be pressure on Pakistan,” said Rehman, referring to reported meetings involving two retired Pakistani nuclear scientists before the Sept. 11 attacks.

“America and the West’s biggest concern is that weapons of mass destruction should not fall into extremists’ hands and, in this case, they seem to be tacitly pointing at Pakistan. India and the anti-Pakistani lobby have always tried to exploit that and they will try to do it again.”

Pakistan dismisses that concern, calling it “speculative”.

“I do not see any possibility, whatsoever, of Pakistani material, or nuclear technology falling into the wrong hands,” a spokesman for the Foreign Ministry, Abdul Basit, told Reuters.

“India knows full well how secure Pakistan’s strategic assets are.”

Obama says he’s confident in the security of Pakistan’s arsenal, but India isn’t so sure.

The neighbours have fought three wars since being carved out of colonial India in 1947 and engaged in several smaller conflicts, including one in 1999 that threatened to go nuclear.

Both nations conducted nuclear tests in 1998.

Currently, they have an agreement to share prior information about new missile tests they plan to carry out, as well as an agreement to share details about each other’s nuclear facilities and their safety on a periodical basis.

But their armies often exchange fire across the border, and peace talks are held only intermittently.

“There is a lot of mistrust as India keeps on receiving reports of secret (nuclear) installations in Pakistan, and it believes that Islamabad is not sharing all its details,” said Naresh Chandra, India’s former envoy to Pakistan.

India is aware, however, of Pakistan’s importance to U.S. and NATO forces in Afghanistan, so it doesn’t expect much American intervention between the two on nuclear issues, Chandra added.

There is more at stake in Washington than nuclear one-upmanship between old enemies. Pakistan’s economy has been hammered by energy shortfalls and high on its wish-list is a civilian nuclear deal with the United States like the one India received under President George W. Bush.

It has been repeatedly rebuffed by the United States — although lately more gently — and media reports in Pakistan suggested China may step up and help with civilian nuclear technology.

That would likely make India even more suspicious because of its own rivalry with China. The two fought a war in 1962.

Washington also would like Pakistan’s help in curtailing Iran’s nuclear programme, although there appears little chance of that.

According to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute, India has between 60-70 warheads while Pakistan has about 60. Neither India nor Pakistan are party to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons that Obama hopes to strengthen. (Additional reporting by Kamran Haider and Augustine Anthony; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan) (For more Reuters coverage of Afghanistan and Pakistan, see: here)

Here’s what G20 leaders had for dinner at 10 Downing Street

London, April 2 (ANI): The G20 leaders gathered at 10 Downing Street on the eve of crunch talks at the global summit enjoyed a dinner menu chosen by celebrity chef Jamie Oliver, which featured the best of seasonal produce from around the UK.

Organic salmon from Shetland, with samphire and sea kale, local vegetables and Irish soda bread formed part of the menu.

The leaders also got to enjoy slow-roasted shoulder of lamb from north Wales, Jersey Royal potatoes, wild mushrooms, and mint sauce.

Bakewell tart and custard were also available.

“I’m very, very proud of my country and its food traditions and I know that the guests at Downing Street will be in for a real treat,” Sky News quoted Oliver as saying.

Even though his wife Jools is due to give birth to their third child imminently, he still prepared delicious dishes for the guests.

Assisting him were eight current apprentices and recent graduates from his Fifteen restaurant. (ANI)

Satyam scam prompts Advani to call for ethics in business

Ahmedabad (Gujarat), Jan.10 (ANI): Senior Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) leader and the party’s prime ministerial candidate in the forthcoming general elections this year, L.K.Advani, on Saturday said ethics and values are inseparable elements of every business.

Advani was speaking at the global summit of the Jain International Trade Organization (JITO).

Commenting on the financial fraud of IT major Satyam Computer Services,he said business without ethics is a sin.

“Once, Gandhiji (Mahatma Gandhi) had said that business without ethics is sin. Business needs values and ethics and, if a few business organizations indulge in unethical practices, they bring a bad name to the business community as a whole,” said Advani.
On Wednesday, Ramalinga Raju, the chairman of Satyam Computer Services admitted that about a billion dollars, or 94 percent of the cash and bank balances on the company’s books at the end of September did not exist.

The scandal had cast a cloud over foreign investment in Asia’s third-largest economy and over its once-booming outsourcing sector, which posted stunning sales growth for years and lavished investors with handsome returns.

According to a party press release, he also called Jainism the most ancient Green Movement in world history.

He pointed out that most people do not often appreciate why Jainism attached such paramount importance to ahimsa. However, two of the greatest challenges before the world today–Terrorism and Climate Change–are both manifestations of violence.

He added that “terrorism is of course the most extreme and inhuman form of violence. But there is another form of violence which the world has been much slower to recognize, and much more hesitant to take firm action against.”

Referring to the violence being inflicted on the Earth by our materialistic civilization,Advani said that only “when we reflect on the challenge of Climate Change that we begin to appreciate the enormous contemporary relevance of the Jain philosophy of ahimsa and jiva daya. We realize that Bhagwan Mahavir and the other Jain Tirthankars were great environmental conservationists.”

“They taught us that we human beings are merely trustees of this planet. We need to re-learn their teachings in our times.” He further added that “eco-friendliness is not a mere fashionable phrase; it has to be interwoven into our development paradigm and also into our day-to-day living,” he added.

Terming pollution as another face of violence, he said that pollution has catastrophic implications for human beings and other species on our planet.

“Pollution has caused a big problem in the form of global warming and climate change, and pollution itself is another form of violence, and it is as grave as militancy. It is the duty of the society as well as administration to counter both (militancy and pollution) forms of violence,” said Advani.

A recent study conducted by US researchers reveals that the warming climate is likely to put affect crops and livestock and could cause serious food shortages for half the world’s population.

In a way “all (of us) have to become adivasis or tribals who know how to exist in harmony with the earth,” he concluded.

He promised that in the event of the BJP and the NDA forming the next government in New Delhi, appropriate steps to deal with both forms of violence-Terrorism and climate change would be given the top priority.

He also urged the government to take bold and quick steps to revive the economy out of the recessionary crisis. (ANI)