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Sarkozy receives the model of a satellite from ISRO Chairman Dr Radhakrishnan in Bengaluru. Image Credit: AFP

Bengaluru: Nearly a month after the US backed India's bid to join top non-proliferation groupings, French President Nicolas Sarkozy on Saturday declared support for New Delhi's membership of the Nuclear Suppliers Group as well as an expanded UN Security Council.

Sarkozy, in an interview, has also said that he will take up issues relating to the civil nuclear liability legislation when he meets Prime Minister Manmohan Singh for official talks in New Delhi on Sunday.

Supporting India's candidacy to join the 45-nation NSG, Sarkozy said it made sense for the country to participate in the work of multilateral bodies responsible for drafting and ensuring compliance with the non-proliferation regime.

"France was first to say in 1998 that it was time to put an end to India's nuclear isolation, as it was absurd to prevent such a country from developing its civilian nuclear sector," Sarkozy said at the Satellite Centre of the state-run Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) here.

Ensuring compliance

"France, the US, Russia and the United Kingdom have already signed agreements with India. Others will also soon join them," Sarkozy said.

"That's why it makes sense for India to now participate fully in the work of the multilateral bodies responsible for drafting and ensuring compliance with the non-proliferation regime, starting with the Nuclear Suppliers Group. France supports India's candidacy to join these groups," he said.

Sarkozy's support to India for the NSG entry comes nearly a month after US President Barack Obama supported New Delhi's full membership in multilateral groupings like the NSG, the Missile Technology Control Regime (MCTR), the Australia Group and the Wassenaar Arrangement.

Sarkozy, who began his four-day India visit here on Saturday, declared that nuclear energy would be the focus of cooperation between the two countries in the years ahead.

"Nuclear energy will now be the focus of our cooperation. We all know how critical it is for India to ensure its energy security," Sarkozy told about 500 invitees at ISRO, comprising top scientists, captains of industry and students.

Noting that the bilateral civil nuclear agreement signed in Paris on September 30, 2008, became a reality a decade after France initiated the move to end India's nuclear isolation, Sarkozy said his country was starting research, training and plant safety programmes for Indian scientists and engineers.

Key partner

"For instance, by participating in the construction of the Jaitapur plant (in Maharasthra), the French firm Areva is becoming a key partner in India's nuclear energy sector," Sarkozy said.

Sarkozy also declared that in the next phase of cooperation, six Indo-French European Pressurised Reactor (EPR) plants will provide 10,000MW of non-polluting energy to the economy to the maximum benefit of manufacturing facilities.

Lauding India's decision to expand its nuclear industry over tenfold during the next two decades to meet growing demand for power from all sectors of the economy, the 55-year-old president said that about 80 per cent (62,000MW) of electricity in France was generated from nuclear energy annually.

"We have decided to build two new European Pressurised Reactor [EPR] power plants, which are now favoured by India, as China and Finland did earlier," Sarkozy told the gathering, which included his glamorous wife Carla Bruni and a large French delegation accompanying him on his second visit to India in three years.

Sarkozy also reiterated France's support for India's candidacy for a reformed UN Security Council. "It is unthinkable that 1.1 billion people are not represented in the UNSC. India deserves a permanent seat in the Security Council," Sarkozy said.

He said Brazil, Germany, Japan and the Arab world and Africa should also be represented in the Security Council.