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HomeUncategorizedNo position yet on accession of non-NPT country into NSG: China

No position yet on accession of non-NPT country into NSG: China

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China on Wednesday said it is yet to form a position on the accession of any specific non-NPT country into the NSG, as it parried questions on whether its “two-step formula” for allowing new members into the elite nuclear club was aimed at pushing Pakistan’s case along with that of India.

India and China are “yet to agree on accession of any specific member into the group”, Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Hua Chunying told media here referring to Tuesday’s first round of talks between the two countries on India’s admission into the 48-member Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG), which controls global nuclear commerce.

Nearly two-and-a-half months after China scuttled India’s NSG membership bid, a Chinese delegation led by director-general of department of arms control Wang Qun held talks in New Delhi with Indian delegation led by Amandeep Singh Gill, joint secretary (disarmament & international security) in the ministry of external affairs.

During the talks, China proposed a two-step approach for admission of new members who are not signatories of nuclear Non Proliferation Treaty (NPT), which Beijing asserts is a must to join the NSG.

Asked about Indian media reports that the formula was aimed at pushing Pakistan’s membership along with that of India, Hua said, “What you said is the Indian report. What I said is what DG Wang Qun said. China has not had a position on the accession of any specific non-NPT country. So first we need to have a proposal on the accession on all the non-NPT countries, then accession of specific non-NPT country,” she said.

“That is to say, China is yet to form a position on any specific non-NPT country. But we are willing to have discussion with the NSG members on the accession of non-NPT countries,” she said.

A Chinese foreign ministry’s statement after Tuesday’s talks said, “China supports the notion of two-step approach within the Group to address the above question, i.e., at the first stage, to explore and reach agreement on a non-discriminatory formula applicable to all the non-NPT states, and to proceed to take up country-specific membership issues at the second stage. China, for its part, expressed its readiness to actively participate in the above process within the group”.

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