Speaking at the IAEA Ministerial Conference on Nuclear Security here, Minister of State for External Affairs M J Akbar also reiterated India's commitment to global nuclear disarmament, non-proliferation and peaceful uses of nuclear energy.
"The sane world wants to prevent malignant actors from getting access to nuclear and radiological material and facilities. Recent developments show that terrorist use of WMD materials is not a theoretical concern. A breach of nuclear security could lead to unimaginable consequences," Akbar said.
He stated that the meeting must carry forward the legacy of the Nuclear Security Summit (NSS) process.
Akbar asserted that India has always held that nuclear security is the domain of national sovereignty but this national prerogative demands national responsibility.
"All states must assume this responsibility and should scrupulously abide by their respective international obligations. Responsible national actions and effective international cooperation should be pursued together to prevent non-state actors and other malignant forces from threatening the lives of innocents on a mass scale, destabilising regional stability and international peace," Akbar said.
"Ensuring effective nuclear security is important for all countries, including those which possess little or no nuclear or other radioactive material," Amano said at the start of a week-long ministerial conference on preventing misuse of radioactive materials and attacks on facilities.
Akbar, in his remarks said, "As a regular participant in the IAEA's Incident and Trafficking Database (ITDB), we encourage active participation of all member states in this network for sharing of information on illicit trafficking and other unauthorised activities or events involving nuclear and radioactive material."
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Akbar also highlighted that with India having taken a leadership position in the effort to combat climate change, it will expand its nuclear energy capacity from the current level of around 6 Giga Watts to over 60 Giga Watts.
Noting that India is party to all the 13 universal instruments accepted as benchmarks for a state's commitments to combat international terrorism, he said India welcomes the entry into force of the 2005 Amendment to the Convention on the Physical Protection of Nuclear Materials (CPPNM) this year.
India will continue to evolve technology against nuclear terrorism not only in terms of physical protection measures but also to guard against cyber intrusion and sabotage, he said.
"We will also continue to maintain and enhance export controls, in particular intangible controls, to complement nuclear security measures. We invite the Agency to take the lead in promoting work on the technology dimension of nuclear security," Akbar said.
"With regard to separated plutonium, India is strictly observing the principle of 'reprocess to reuse' whereby reprocessing of spent fuel and commissioning of fast reactors are being synchronised to preclude any build-up of a plutonium stockpile," he highlighted.
This approach is both proliferation-resistant and nuclear security friendly, Akbar stressed.
India will also host in New Delhi in February 2017 the Implementation and Assessment Group (IAG) meeting of the Global Initiative to Combat Nuclear Terrorism (GICNT), he noted.
"We know the extent of the critical danger. We must be equally clear about the depth, breadth and clarity of our response," he said.
