Australia to break international law in selling uranium to India
Ms Gillard not only failed to inform Foreign Minister Kevin Rudd of her nuclear trade ambitions, but she also failed to consult government lawyers.
Uranium for India deal ‘may be illegal’, Canberra Times, BY CHRIS JOHNSON, CHIEF POLITICAL CORRESPONDENT, 29 Nov, 2011 Australia will be in breach of international law if it sells uranium to India without the nuclear-armed nation first opening up its atomic facilities for independent inspection.
Leading international law expert Don Rothwell, from the Australian National University, has provided that legal opinion to the Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons. The non-governmental organisation will issue the formal legal advice today. In it, Professor Rothwell insists that the South Pacific Nuclear Free Zone Treaty, also known as the Treaty of Rarotonga, prohibits Australia from selling uranium to countries that have not accepted full safeguards outlined in the Non- Proliferation Treaty.
That includes opening up all of its nuclear facilities to the International Atomic Energy Agency. ‘‘If India does not agree to Article III.1 Non-Proliferation Treaty safeguards and Australia were to export uranium to India, Australia would be in violation of its Treaty of Rarotonga obligations,’’ Professor Rothwell said. ‘‘Australia could [then] be exposed to the complaints procedure of Annex 4 of the treaty initiated by other state parties to the Treaty of Rarotonga.’’
Professor Rothwell said even though India was not a party to the Non- Proliferation Treaty, it did not exclude it from being subject to such safeguards as far as the Treaty of Rarotonga was concerned. He said he would be surprised if the Government did not already have its own legal advice to the same effect.
The Labor Party will debate the uranium issue at its national conference in Sydney this weekend. Prime Minister Julia Gillard has flagged her intention to push for a change to Labor’s platform that Australia only sell uranium to countries that have signed up to the Non- Proliferation Treaty.
A spokesman for Ms Gillard said yesterday, ‘‘Any decision by the Australian Government on the transfer of uranium to India will comply with our international treaty obligations.’’ But the Australian director of the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons, Tim Wright, said it was highly unlikely that India would accept full safeguards.
He said it appeared that Ms Gillard not only failed to inform Foreign Minister Kevin Rudd of her nuclear trade ambitions, but she also failed to consult government lawyers.
‘‘In light of this significant legal hurdle, the battle … appears to be far from over,’’ he said…
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