Today's Newspaper

In paper Magazine
ad_head
FO rejects report of bomb-grade uranium from China

Friday, 13 Nov, 2009
font-size small font-size largefont-sizeprint email share
Pakistan's foreign ministry spokesman Abdul Basit. — AFP Photo

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan on Friday rejected a US newspaper report that China provided the state with weapons grade uranium for two bombs in 1982.

A spokesman for Pakistan's foreign ministry rejected the allegations in a Washington Post article as ‘baseless’.

‘Pakistan strongly rejects the assertions in the article that is evidently timed to malign Pakistan and China,’ the spokesman said in a statement.

In written accounts cited by the newspaper, Dr Abdul Qadeer Khan said China also supplied a blueprint for a simple bomb that significantly speeded Pakistan's nuclear weapon program.

The Post said the deliberate act of proliferation was the culmination of a secret nuclear deal struck in 1976 by Chinese leader Mao Zedong and Pakistan's prime minister Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto.

The foreign ministry spokesman, however, slammed the report as an attempt to detract attention from India, which like Pakistan is not a signatory to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.

‘This is yet another attempt to divert attention from the overt and covert support being extended by some states to the Indian nuclear programme since its inception and intensified more recently,’ he said.

Pakistan and China had ‘comprehensive and all-dimensional’ cooperation, which includes civilian nuclear cooperation for peaceful purposes, he said.

‘This has always been above board. Pakistan and China have always respected their respective international obligations and non-proliferation norms,’ the ministry spokesman said.

US President Barack Obama is expected to raise nuclear proliferation issues with China when he visits Beijing on Tuesday.

Dr Khan, the alleged mastermind of a nuclear proliferation network that stretched to Libya and possibly Iran, stated that top politicians and military officers were immersed in Pakistan's foreign nuclear dealings, the Post said.

Security arrangements have been imposed on Dr Khan after a five-year period of house arrest for operating a proliferation network was lifted in February.

font-size small font-size largefont-size print email share
HIGHLIGHTS
  • A life lived well
    With passing of Ajmal Khattak, we have lost an important voice of sanity in these turbulent times.
  • A challenging doctrine
    Cold Start will be a portent of escalation, and inevitably a disaster for Pakistan and India.


advertisement