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Iran wants to work with India on nuclear safety, accident prevention

Ryuzaki

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Iran, once an international outcast due to its controversial nuclear programme, has expressed hope it can work in tandem with India to enhance nuclear safety and knowledge management in the region to prevent “accidents”. The country also plans to invite India to participate in the annual VVER Technology Forum next year. “We have common issues. Both countries use VVER (Water-Water Energetic Reactor) technologies. Both have developed research activities and they could follow that. We have similar interests in the nuclear programme from the safety point of view. Things could be done very easily. We hope things could be extended in a more tangible manner in the future,” Naser Rastkhah, who heads the Iran Nuclear Regulatory Authority, told media.

Rastkhah is participating in the 11th International Public Forum-Dialogue “Nuclear Energy, Environment, Safety”. “Next year we are going to host the VVER Forum and we will invite the (nuclear) regulatory body of India,” Rastkhah said.

Banking on India’s long-standing experience in nuclear safety, Rastkhah raised concerns over the dearth of knowledge among countries that are foraying into the nuclear energy sector in the region.

“From the regulatory point of view, we belong to the same region and any accident anywhere is an accident everywhere. India has a very good experience long before Iran in this regard and they could probably cooperate with our nuclear regulatory authority to increase safety in the region… to of course prevent accidents.”

“Most of the newcomers in the region have least knowledge in safety of (using) nuclear energy. If people are aware, safety is there. Usually we are influenced by lack of information. If we could extend our collaboration with the Indian regulatory body, we are on the safe side,” he noted.

Earlier this year, India and Iran took a major step in boosting connectivity and trade with the inking of an agreement on the Chabahar port. Prime Minister Narendra Modi held talks with the Iranian leadership and said that the time has come for both sides to “regain the past glory of the relationship”. The two sides also signed 12 agreements, including on science and technology, culture and railways and three on the port itself.

India and Iran are not members of the Nuclear Suppliers Group. Asked about India’s bid for membership and China blocking its entry into the group, Rastkhah clarified he has no information on this. Iran’s nuclear programme began in the 1950s and has had a chequered past.

On July 14, 2015, Iran clinched a deal with five permanent members of the UN Security Council plus Germany, or P5+1, ending a decade-long dispute over its controversial nuclear programme.

The agreement resulted in the lifting of international and Western nuclear-related economic and financial sanctions on Iran in exchange for wide-scale limitation on the country’s nuclear activities for a specific period of time.

Focusing on the current scenario, Rastkhah flagged issues with countries in the southern part of the Persian Gulf.

“I am very much concerned about the southern part of the Persian Gulf. Clean energy in the region is nice, but there is lack of knowledge and it is very difficult to manage. Our people say ‘never we want another Fukushima’,” he added.

http://indianexpress.com/article/in...n-nuclear-safety-accident-prevention-4393377/
 
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Nice deal. Hope Iran-India can work on this. But I think Indian govt will wait till a more clearer picture emerges on the talks of Iran Nuclear talks. Hope it ends peacefully.
 
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LOL, INDIA?

Let me go to North Korea and learn the values of democracy and human rights.
 
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Indian Nuclear Security is in abysmal conditions, its like learning about morality from Lucifer himself. lol

http://www.abc.net.au/7.30/content/2013/s3720190.htm
well, why not after all our great poet Saadi In Golestan when reciting a story from Loghman has said
"they asked Loghman the sage that you learned manner from whom and he answer from the people who had no manners"
 
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well, why not after all our great poet Saadi In Golestan when reciting a story from Loghman has said
"they asked Loghman the sage that you learned manner from whom and he answer from the people who had no manners"

Why are you iranis so hellbent on making enemies with everyone?
 
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well, why not after all our great poet Saadi In Golestan when reciting a story from Loghman has said
"they asked Loghman the sage that you learned manner from whom and he answer from the people who had no manners"
?
 
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Why are you iranis so hellbent on making enemies with everyone?
:disagree: bet you are a young one who is tired from so much being picked on i this forum .
go read the posts in this tread from the beginning and this time carefully ,you'll get the meaning.
 
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LOL, INDIA?

Let me go to North Korea and learn the values of democracy and human rights.
hmmm well you could learn the same in your country as well.
HUMAN RIGHTS .. does that ring any bells ?
 
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Why are you iranis so hellbent on making enemies with everyone?
You don't understand him and you took the meaning of the poem literally. You should think deeper to understand what he meant..

For example: 2 countries with high car accidents per capita decide to work together to reduce such accidents, so they share statistics and ideas. There is no shame in learning from each other, even if both countries have awfull record of road safety.
So you can learn about safety from unsafe situations!... as you can learn manners from the un/bad-mannered people.
 
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Who wrote this?,some right wing american?,its pretty ironic coming from a country that didnt even sign the npt unlike iran,the only ""controversy" was the one the west created in its failed attempts to try and deny iran its rights to an indigenous nuclear program.
Your going to be dismayed but the npt was probably designed against India. Hence why Delhi didn't sign it.
 
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