Is a nuke scam unfolding? Are the loot of atomic mineral wealth of the nation and Indo-US nuke deal (which included the cash-for-votes scam) linked?
As it unfolds, the nuke scam is likely to be larger than the SoniaG UPA's 2G and Coalgate, even on a SoniaG UPA scam-scale. The loss of the nation's mineral wealth is likely to be larger than Rs. 1.9 lakh crores.
The loss has been enabled by issuance and implementation of an illegal notification by DAE in gross violation of the Mines and Minerals Development and Regulation Act of 1957 which continues to list ilmenite, zircon, monazite, rutile, leucoxine etc. as atomic minerals. The illegal notification declared almost all minerals excepting monazite as on Open General List and allowed private parties to export the placer sands containing all these minerals.
The procedure for issuance of a monazite clearance certificate by DAE was discontinued following the issuance in 2006 by DAE of the illegal notification. This certification was intended to check if there was any radioactivity in the consignments transported and shipped to foreign customers.
Nuclear Suppliers Group lists monazite and other atomic minerals as nuclear supplies and enforces stringent controls on and inspections of the nuclear supplies. Since India is now a party to the regulations of this group with the Indo-US nuke deal, why is Govt. of India continuing to allow the export of precious atomic minerals from the country? There is a danger that the exports may end up with the enemies of the nation, creating a national security risk.
This is one reason why the Nuke scam is larger than even Coalgate because India was said to possess the largest reserves of thorium-containing monazite of the world and allowing this wealth to be depleted by exports reduces the nation's ability to follow the declared program of Nuclear Doctrine outlined as Homi Bhabha's 3-stage dual-use nuclear energy development program.
Will Govt. of India wake up and immediately ban the export of atomic minerals, remove the atomic minerals from the Open General List and enforce strict security measures along the coastline of the nation to safeguard the rich wealth of the nation contained in placer sand complexes?
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2013/05/ban-export-of-beach-sand-minerals-bjp.html Ban export of beach sand minerals: BJP MP Hansraj Ahir
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2013/05/great-thorium-robbery-ongoing.html Great thorium robbery, ongoing...
Kalyanaraman
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2013/03/great-rare-earths-robbery-in-india.htmlGreat Rare Earths' robbery in India. Fight by a citizens' forum
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2013/01/citizens-petition-for-action-against.htmlCitizens' petition for action against perpetrators of the Great Rare Earths' Robbery in India
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2013/01/china-moving-to-thorium-as-safe-nuclear.htmlChina moving to thorium as safe nuclear fuel. GOI, protect and use India's thorium reserves for energy needs of Indian Ocean Community.
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2013/01/china-blazes-trail-for-clean-nuclear.htmlChina blazes trail for 'clean' nuclear power from thorium
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/12/dae-oct-2012-reply-on-thorium-loot-full.htmlDAE's Oct. 2012 reply on Thorium loot full of loopholes. DAE is yet to explain how Atomic Minerals list was changed without Parliament approval.
Is safe, green thorium power finally ready for prime time? -- John Hewitt
Thorium, China, Environment , Energy Takashi Kamei (Video 33:47)
Illegal notification of 18 Jan. 2006 on Atomic Minerals and loot of Rs. 96,120 Crores worth Atomic Minerals - Complaints
Govt. of India should act now to stop illegal mining of Atomic Minerals
India announces plan to build thorium reactor. Congrats to India's nuclear scientists.
Illegal mining of Atomic minerals worth Rs. 96,120 crores
Submit views/suggestions on Mines and Minerals (Development and Regulation) Bill No. 110 of 2011
Cause and effect: a case study in and dossiers on Rare earths/Atomic Minerals of India
DAE, cancel and withdraw an illegal notification issued in January 2006.
Atomic minerals include thorium, uranium, monazite, zircon, ilmenite, rutile and leucoxene (Part B of First Schedule of the Act 1957)
PM should ban placer sands mining, nationalise minerals of national importance consistent with Shah Commission recommendations on manganese/iron ore mining
Our nuclear program will be thorium based - APJ Abdul Kalam
Protection of thorium & other rare earth minerals - Swamy refutes DAE claims
‘Our policy is to reprocess all the fuel put into a nuclear reactor’ -- Sekhar Basu
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/10/protection-of-thorium-reserves-in.html
Cheap nuclear energy is an illusion -- Kumar Chellappan
DAE Press release : Export of Monazite from India. India backtracks on involving private miners in monazite - Ajoy K Das
Thorium loot: No private parties permitted to produce monazite, says DAE
Cheap,abundant & very safe nuclear power.....Thorium
Thorium loot spells strategic loss
Kerala Metals and Minerals Ltd causing radiation: PIL
Separation of monazite from placer sands and strategic needs of India's energy programme.
Nuclear Thorium: Country needs thorium-based fast breeders -- Dr. Kalam
Near monopoly position of a company in garnet placer sands
Estimated value of Manavalakurichi placer sands loot in a decade: Rs. 1 lakh crore
Placer sands exports detailed in a Criminal Petition in Hon’ble Supreme Court
Govt. misled Parliament on thorium loot. Thorium a game changer for India's power needs?
Export profiles of placer sands of Manavalakurichi complex
Rare earth complex of India -- containing thorium, the strategic nuclear fuel
India's nuclear energy through thorium. Powering the world.
Thorium could have powered India
Thorium UPA's new coalgate?
How far off is thorium energy? It is producing energy already -- in many reactors of India...
Cumulative list of blogposts with label "Thorium" (September 27, 2012). National imperative of protecting Rare earths including thorium.
As it unfolds, the nuke scam is likely to be larger than the SoniaG UPA's 2G and Coalgate, even on a SoniaG UPA scam-scale. The loss of the nation's mineral wealth is likely to be larger than Rs. 1.9 lakh crores.
The loss has been enabled by issuance and implementation of an illegal notification by DAE in gross violation of the Mines and Minerals Development and Regulation Act of 1957 which continues to list ilmenite, zircon, monazite, rutile, leucoxine etc. as atomic minerals. The illegal notification declared almost all minerals excepting monazite as on Open General List and allowed private parties to export the placer sands containing all these minerals.
The procedure for issuance of a monazite clearance certificate by DAE was discontinued following the issuance in 2006 by DAE of the illegal notification. This certification was intended to check if there was any radioactivity in the consignments transported and shipped to foreign customers.
Nuclear Suppliers Group lists monazite and other atomic minerals as nuclear supplies and enforces stringent controls on and inspections of the nuclear supplies. Since India is now a party to the regulations of this group with the Indo-US nuke deal, why is Govt. of India continuing to allow the export of precious atomic minerals from the country? There is a danger that the exports may end up with the enemies of the nation, creating a national security risk.
This is one reason why the Nuke scam is larger than even Coalgate because India was said to possess the largest reserves of thorium-containing monazite of the world and allowing this wealth to be depleted by exports reduces the nation's ability to follow the declared program of Nuclear Doctrine outlined as Homi Bhabha's 3-stage dual-use nuclear energy development program.
Will Govt. of India wake up and immediately ban the export of atomic minerals, remove the atomic minerals from the Open General List and enforce strict security measures along the coastline of the nation to safeguard the rich wealth of the nation contained in placer sand complexes?
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2013/05/ban-export-of-beach-sand-minerals-bjp.html Ban export of beach sand minerals: BJP MP Hansraj Ahir
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2013/05/great-thorium-robbery-ongoing.html Great thorium robbery, ongoing...
Kalyanaraman
Thursday 16 August 1973
MARINE PLACER DEPOSITS CONTAINING MONAZITE-ILMENITE-RUTILE-ZIRCON GARNET SANDS ARE BEING WORKED FROM MEAN HIGH REPEAT HIGH TIDE LANDWARD ON THE COASTS OF KERALA AND TAMIL NADU.MOYNIHAN
1974 October 10, 23:53 (Thursday)
1. DURING HIS MEETING WITH MEMBERS OF THE JOINT COMMITTEE ON ATOMIC ENERGY OCTOBER 3, AMBASSADOR MOYNIHAN WAS ASKED ABOUT CURRENT STATUS INDIAN STUDY OF EFFECTS ON HUMANS OF PROLONGED EXPOSURE TO SOUTH INDIAN MONAZITE SANDS. 2. COMMITTEE STAFF HAS ADVISED IT WAS REFERRING TO A PAPER GIVEN AT THE 4TH CONFERENCE ON PEACEFUL USES OF ATOMIC ENERGY IN GENEVA IN 1971 ENTITLED: "EVALUATION OF THE LONG-TERM EFFECTS OF HIGH BACKGROUND RADIATION ON SELECTED POPULATION GROUPS OF THE KERALA COAST" (A/CONF/49/P/545). PAPER WAS WRITTEN BY GOPAL-AYENGAR, ET. AL. 3. WOULD APPRECIATE ANY AVAILABLE UPDATE ON THIS STUDY FOR FORWARDING TO THE JOINT COMMITTEE, WHICH HAS CON- SIDERABLE INTEREST IN SUBJECT. INGERSOLL
1974 October 16, 14:45 (Wednesday) |
PLEASE PASS THE FOLLOWING MESSAGE TO JOINT COMMITTEE ON ATOMIC ENERGY CHAIRMAN PRICE FROM AMBASSADOR MOYNIHAN 1. WE DON'T YET HAVE AN UP-TO-DATE REPORT ON THE CURRENT STATUS OF THE GOI STUDY OF THE EFFECTS ON HUMANS OF PROLONGED EXPOSURE TO SOUTH INDIAN MONAZITE SANDS BUT WE HAVE ALL OUR LINES OUT. I PLAN TO TRAVEL TO BOMBAY NEXT WEEK TO SEE IAEC CHAIRMAN SETHNA AND EXPECT THAT HE WILL BE ABLE TO PUT US ONTO THE LATEST INFORMATION WHICH WE'LL BE PLEASED TO PASS ALONG JUST AS SOON AS AVAILABLE. IMMENSELY ENJOYED MY SESSION WITH YOU. THIS LAYMAN WAS HIGHLY IMPRESSED. MOYNIHAN
India's three-stage nuclear power programme was formulated by Dr. Homi Bhabha in the 1950s to secure the country’s long term energy independence, through the use ofuranium and thorium reserves found in the monazite sands of coastal regions of South India.
According to Siegfried Hecker, a former director (1986–1997) of the Los Alamos National Laboratory in the U.S., "India has the most technically ambitious and innovative nuclear energy program in the world. The extent and functionality of its nuclear experimental facilities are matched only by those in Russia and are far ahead of what is left in the US…"
Indian government proceeded to negotiate and execute the Indo-US Nuclear Deal, which then paved the way for the NSG waiver on international uranium imports to India in 2008.
· According to one foreign analyst, the deal could “over time… result in India being weaned away from its… three-phase nuclear program involving FBRs and advanced PHWRs. This would occur should India become confident that it would have assured supplies of relatively cheap natural uranium, including from Australia. Of course, nobody in the Indian nuclear establishment would yet admit to that possibility.” (Gordon, Sandy (September 2008), "Implications of the Sale of Australian Uranium to India" (pdf), Working Paper No. 410(Canberra: Strategic and Defence Studies Centre), retrieved 27 March 2012)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/India's_three-stage_nuclear_power_programme
What Exactly is this Thorium Scam?
Monday, September 3rd, 2012 | by News DeskA mammoth Thorium scam, which has swindled the national exchequer of Rs 48 Lakh Crore is supposed to have been unearthed by RTI activists and the Statesman Newspaper. Sources state that the missing thorium, estimated at $100 a tonne will make all other scams the UPA has embroiled itself in, seem very dwarf-like. It has been stated that 2.1 million tones of monazite, which is equivalent to 195,300 tonnes of thorium at 9.3% recovery, has disappeared from Indian shores after 2004, the year Manmohan Singh became India’s Prime Minister.
On 30 November, 2011, an RTI activist, Kodikunnel Suresh sought the Prime Minister’s response regarding the export of monazite, whether companies of mining beach sand have violated the Atomic Energy Regulatory Board rules. To this, V Narayanaswamy, Minister of State, PMO, said that beach sands with heavy minerals were exported. But monazite was excluded from this.
Narayanaswamy stated that licence under the Atomic Energy Act was necessary for monazite and thorium export. However, being prescribed substances, no licence was given for its export. The Prime Minister, who heads the Department of Atomic Energy, delisted these heavy minerals from the prescribed substances list vide SO 61 (E) dated 20 January, 2006. This was done to facilitate their export by private companies, with licences being granted with the proviso that “having undertaken to comply with the conditions prescribed in the Atomic Energy (Working of mines, minerals hand handling of prescribed substances) Rules, 1984, licence is issued with the approval of the Licensing Authority.”
Reports state that radioactive minerals, vital for nuclear energy programme, are taken out of the country without any restriction, inspite of the Indian Rare Earths being the only organization being authorized to extract thorium from monazite sands. To add to this, private exporters of prohibited minerals are also presented with Special Awards and Certificates of Merit by Chemicals and Allied Products Export Promotion Council of the Government of India.
As stated before, Indian Rare Earths Limited is the only authorized body that can extract Thorium because indiscriminate and non-monitored mining can cause severe erosion in coastal areas. The Chief Controller of Mines, which comes under Union Ministry of Mines is the Licencing Authority. However, following the retirement of CP Ambrose, Chief Controller of Mines, on 30 June 2008, the post is being kept open deliberately. It is also stated by sources that Ranjan Sahai, Controller of Mines of the Central Zone, is now allowed to officiate in place of the Chief Controller. He is alleged to be close to mineral industrialists of the private placer.
Brutus Singh and the Thorium scam
Back in July 2008, I’d written a piece
which detailed why the US-India Nuclear deal was possibly India’s biggest strategic blunder, why it would cripple our long-term indigenous N-program, who would retain the key controlling interests, and who would profit the most from the ‘letter of the law’.
Turns out, there was more to it than was just all that.
Our own Brutus Singh, the ‘honorable’ man, got Thorium
Our own Brutus Singh, the ‘honorable’ man, got Thorium
removed
from the strategic minerals list on 20 Jan 2006, two years before the N-deal took center-stage, and enabled private players to extract and sell Thorium to foreign companies. The same honorable Singh who as Coal minister gave Coal blocks to buddies at throw away non-auction prices (‘silence is Coal-den’) also okay-ed the unrestricted sale of the one resource vital to our indigenous N-program.
The scale of what has been sold presents two significant losses.
The first is Strategic, the second is Monetary.
The first is Strategic, the second is Monetary.
India is gifted in nature to have about 21+% of the world’s Thorium resources, i.e estimated around 520K tonnes. (IAEA, 2005) We need to have large reserves for our N-program, and our energy needs cannot reasonably be compared with any country’s except China. Thorium is a clean fuel, has low radio-toxicity, and its reactors are leaps and bounds safer than the Fukushima-type (Uranium) reactors which are common around the world.
China, among other nations is waking up to what Homi Bhabha knew and envisioned a half-century ago for India, and is pushing heavily in the direction of Thorium reactors.
In the last 7 years, apparently 2.1 million tonnes of Monazite ore has been sold from beaches in Tamil-Nadu, Kerala and Orissa, ore which is ultra-rich in Thorium, Titanium and other key metals.
Refer Rajappa’s two-part series in The Statesman:
Refer Rajappa’s two-part series in The Statesman:
Now, Thorium has a recovery rate of 5-9% from Monazite,
so anywhere between 105-190K tonnes of Thorium has been sold.
We’ve apparently sold between 20-40% of our reserves.
so anywhere between 105-190K tonnes of Thorium has been sold.
We’ve apparently sold between 20-40% of our reserves.
What is the र value of this? I don’t know. I’ve no idea what the price of thorium is, I tried looking but quite hard to ascertain. Sam Rajappa, who heads The Statesman, goes with an estimate of $100 per ton. Even assuming 30% of this figure, the loss ranges from 16 thousand Crores to 28 thousand Crores. Mutliply this range by whatever the real price of Thorium is.
The more significant loss of course, is the resource loss having prostituted the world’s most resource-rich coastline.
A period of pitch darkness before a new inevitable era of light?
http://www.aryaputr.com/2012/09/brutus-singh-and-the-thorium-scam/
Remarks
Cumulative list of blogposts with label 'Thorium' (May 24, 2013):
Indo-US Nuclear Deal -
The Indo-U.S. civilian nuclear agreement, also known as the Indo-U.S. nuclear deal, signed by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and then US President George W.Bush in 2005. It segregates India’s civil and military nuclear facilities and the civil nuclear facilities are placed under International Atomic Energy Agency (I.A.E.A) safeguards. The U.S government in exchange will provide its cooperation in technology and equipments useful for the Indian civil nuclear facilities. In 2009 IAEA Board of Governors signed the India-specific safeguards agreement with the Indian government.
In the separation plan India has identified 35 civil nuclear facilities for inspection. In 2008 the US government also approached for the grant of an exemption for India by the Nuclear Suppliers Group, an export-control cartel that had been formed mainly in response to India’s first nuclear test in 1974. The 45-nation NSG granted the waiver to India on September 6, 2008 allowing it to access civilian nuclear technology and fuel from other countries .The implementation of this waiver makes India the only known country with nuclear weapons which is not a party to the Non Proliferation Treaty (NPT) but is still allowed to carry out nuclear commerce with the rest of the world.
The US House of Representatives passed the bill on 28 September 2008. Two days later, India and France inked a similar nuclear pact making France the first country to have such an agreement with India. On October 1, 2008 the US Senate also approved the civilian nuclear agreement allowing India to purchase nuclear fuel and technology from the United States. U.S. President, George W. Bush, signed the legislation on the Indo-US nuclear deal, approved by the U.S. Congress, into law, now called the United States-India Nuclear Cooperation Approval and Non-proliferation Enhancement Act, on October 8, 2008. According to the Nuclear Power Corporation of India, the agreement will help India meet its goal of adding 25,000 MW of nuclear power capacity through imports of nuclear reactors and fuel by 2020.
Non Proliferation Treaty: The objective of NPT is to prevent spread of nuclear weapons and weapon technology and to achieve complete nuclear disarmament. The Treaty promotes use of nuclear fissile material for peaceful purposes. It is an international treaty, opened for signature in 1968, the Treaty entered into force in 1970. A total of 187 parties have joined the Treaty, including the five nuclear-weapon States. Various political parties opposed the nuclear deal since it can generate a ban on military nuclear tests.
Taking Stock of the U.S.-India Nuclear Deal
Remarks
Geoffrey Pyatt
Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary, Bureau of South and Central Asian Affairs
Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary, Bureau of South and Central Asian Affairs
Mumbai, India
September 30, 2011
...In 2006, bipartisan majorities in our Congress passed the U.S.-India Peaceful Atomic Energy Cooperation Act, which exempted this cooperation from certain requirements of the Atomic Energy Act of 1954. Next, we were able to negotiate, sign, and eventually pass through Congress the U.S.-India 123 Agreement. Finally, we worked with our partners in the Nuclear Suppliers Group to reach consensus on a waiver for civilian nuclear exports to India in the summer of 2008. Each of these steps required a large investment of political capital, as well as the persistence, patience, and hard work of our diplomats and lawmakers who spent countless hours at negotiating tables in Washington, New Delhi, Vienna and capitals around the world.
But none of our efforts would have been possible without India’s agreement to implement a series of enhanced nonproliferation commitments which ensured that our cooperation strengthened the international nonproliferation system, from which India itself benefits and of which India is a critical stakeholder. India agreed to adopt the same responsibilities and practices as other leading countries with advanced nuclear technology, by taking a number of concrete steps.
- First, India agreed to draw a clear line between its civilian and military nuclear facilities, and to voluntarily place its civilian nuclear facilities under IAEA safeguards. India’s 2005 Separation Plan identified 14 thermal power reactors, and well as a number of upstream and downstream facilities, and nine research facilities for the safeguarded side of India's nuclear complex.
- Next, India filed its declaration with the IAEA regarding these civilian facilities, and to demonstrate that the facilities would not in any way contribute to India’s strategic program, India further agreed to an Additional Protocol applicable to those facilities.
- Then, to help ensure that Indian companies comply with India’s international commitments to not transfer sensitive technologies to countries of concern, India harmonized its national export controls with the control lists and guidelines of the Nuclear Suppliers Group and the Missile Technology Control Regime.
- Finally, India committed to maintain its unilateral moratorium on nuclear testing, and agreed to work with the U.S. to conclude a multilateral Fissile Material Cutoff Treaty to irreversibly and on a global basis reduce the amount of fissile material available for nuclear weapons.
These steps clearly demonstrated to the world India’s commitment to preventing proliferation from its civil-nuclear program and brought India’s domestic system into closer conformity with international nonproliferation standards.
http://www.state.gov/p/sca/rls/rmks/2011/174883.htm
http://www.aolnews.com/2011/03/22/wikileaks-cables-cause-uproar-in-india-over-nuke-deal-with-us/
WikiLeaks Cables Cause Uproar in India Over Nuke Deal With US
Mar 22, 2011 – 5:26 PM
Indian politicians are in a stew over cables released by WikiLeakssuggesting that Indian lawmakers were paid millions of dollars to vote in favor of a civil nuclear deal with the U.S.
The deal was regarded as a milestone in Indo-American relations. But it was opposed by several groups in India, especially the Communist Party, which withdrew support from the governing coalition as the deal was being finalized in 2008.
Brinda Karat, a senior leader of the Communist Party, told AOL News that the cables exposed howCongress Party leaders tried to "whitewash the political crimes that have been committed."
The 2008 civil nuclear agreement was a first step in repairing India-U.S. relations, which had worsened after the U.S. imposed economic sanctions on India for conducting underground nuclear tests in 1998.
The deal was signed under the Bush administration and is still being finessed by the Obama administration, which hosted its first state dinner in 2009 for Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh.
The leaked cable, published in The Hindu, said that an Indian political aide showed an American diplomat two chests of cash, allegedly part of a $25 million fund to pay for votes.
Before the vote of confidence on the nuclear deal in 2008, leaders of the main opposition Bharatiya Janata Party, or BJP, produced cash on the floor of the House and claimed that votes had been bought. A subsequent investigation, however, did not lead to any concrete findings.
The cables have brought the issue to the forefront again, according to Karat, who has called on Congress Party leaders to confess and asked the government to conduct criminal prosecutions immediately.
Several analysts in India have expressed concern that the government is bending over backward to accommodate the U.S., which they say is running the show.
The immediate question, however, is whether the Congress-led government will survive. Many observers have suggested that this scandal -- like many others -- will blow over, especially because the allegations are old and the deal has moved forward since then. And WikiLeaks has said that it will reveal more India-related cables, which could distract the public and media with another scandal.
"In normal circumstances, the government would not survive, but we don't live in normal times. ... The corruption has become so deep-rooted," said Prashant Bhushan, a prominent Indian lawyer and activist, who convinced the Supreme Court to investigate the loss of $40 billion from the Indian Treasury in the "2G Spectrum" scam last year.
Still, Bhushan observed that the fragile polity, if hit with another blow, could crumble in the coming months.
Following the recent uproar, Prime Minister Singh told the Indian Parliament that the cables were "speculative, unverified and unverifiable."
"It is unfortunate that the opposition continues to raise old charges that have been debated, discussed and rejected by the people of India," he said last week.
WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, however, insists that the cables are authentic and that Singh is misleading the public.
"The comments that I've been hearing from Prime Minister Singh, these to me seem like a deliberate attempt to mislead the public by suggesting that governments around the world do not accept this material and that it's not verified," Assange told Indian news channel NDTV.
"That does not mean every fact in them is correct. You have to look at their sources and how they gave this information," he said Monday.
Shoma Chaudhury, the managing editor of Tehelka, an Indian news magazine known for its undercover exposes, argues that the cables have too many "ifs and buts" and are only of "speculative value."
"They are not conclusive by a long shot," she said, adding that the Indian political aide who showed the money to the American official was a junior operative and could have been exaggerating.
While the Congress Party has been mired in a series of billion-dollar corruption scams, its soft-spoken leader is generally regarded as being clean. But in the wake of the new scandal, the BJP has called for his resignation.
It is unlikely that the current scandal will lead to Singh's resignation, according to Vinod Mudgal, who runs a project to improve rural livelihood in India that includes more transparency in governance.
"In South Asia, corruption is endemic ... The poor have to pay more bribes than the rich in their everyday life," he said. "But there will be a limited impact."
Today, the opposition staged a walkout of a parliamentary session, saying Singh had misled the House in 2008 by claiming that lawmakers had not been bribed.
But the BJP hasn't escaped the scandal unscathed. Shortly after the first revelation, WikiLeaks released cables that suggested the opposition party publicly slammed the nuclear deal but privately reassured the Americans they were OK with it.
"The result of all this is that even the opposition party has no moral authority," Bhushan said.
The BJP has denied engaging in any hypocrisy.
The deal was regarded as a milestone in Indo-American relations. But it was opposed by several groups in India, especially the Communist Party, which withdrew support from the governing coalition as the deal was being finalized in 2008.
Brinda Karat, a senior leader of the Communist Party, told AOL News that the cables exposed howCongress Party leaders tried to "whitewash the political crimes that have been committed."
The 2008 civil nuclear agreement was a first step in repairing India-U.S. relations, which had worsened after the U.S. imposed economic sanctions on India for conducting underground nuclear tests in 1998.
The deal was signed under the Bush administration and is still being finessed by the Obama administration, which hosted its first state dinner in 2009 for Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh.
The leaked cable, published in The Hindu, said that an Indian political aide showed an American diplomat two chests of cash, allegedly part of a $25 million fund to pay for votes.
Before the vote of confidence on the nuclear deal in 2008, leaders of the main opposition Bharatiya Janata Party, or BJP, produced cash on the floor of the House and claimed that votes had been bought. A subsequent investigation, however, did not lead to any concrete findings.
The cables have brought the issue to the forefront again, according to Karat, who has called on Congress Party leaders to confess and asked the government to conduct criminal prosecutions immediately.
Several analysts in India have expressed concern that the government is bending over backward to accommodate the U.S., which they say is running the show.
The immediate question, however, is whether the Congress-led government will survive. Many observers have suggested that this scandal -- like many others -- will blow over, especially because the allegations are old and the deal has moved forward since then. And WikiLeaks has said that it will reveal more India-related cables, which could distract the public and media with another scandal.
"In normal circumstances, the government would not survive, but we don't live in normal times. ... The corruption has become so deep-rooted," said Prashant Bhushan, a prominent Indian lawyer and activist, who convinced the Supreme Court to investigate the loss of $40 billion from the Indian Treasury in the "2G Spectrum" scam last year.
Still, Bhushan observed that the fragile polity, if hit with another blow, could crumble in the coming months.
Following the recent uproar, Prime Minister Singh told the Indian Parliament that the cables were "speculative, unverified and unverifiable."
"It is unfortunate that the opposition continues to raise old charges that have been debated, discussed and rejected by the people of India," he said last week.
WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, however, insists that the cables are authentic and that Singh is misleading the public.
"The comments that I've been hearing from Prime Minister Singh, these to me seem like a deliberate attempt to mislead the public by suggesting that governments around the world do not accept this material and that it's not verified," Assange told Indian news channel NDTV.
"That does not mean every fact in them is correct. You have to look at their sources and how they gave this information," he said Monday.
Shoma Chaudhury, the managing editor of Tehelka, an Indian news magazine known for its undercover exposes, argues that the cables have too many "ifs and buts" and are only of "speculative value."
"They are not conclusive by a long shot," she said, adding that the Indian political aide who showed the money to the American official was a junior operative and could have been exaggerating.
While the Congress Party has been mired in a series of billion-dollar corruption scams, its soft-spoken leader is generally regarded as being clean. But in the wake of the new scandal, the BJP has called for his resignation.
It is unlikely that the current scandal will lead to Singh's resignation, according to Vinod Mudgal, who runs a project to improve rural livelihood in India that includes more transparency in governance.
"In South Asia, corruption is endemic ... The poor have to pay more bribes than the rich in their everyday life," he said. "But there will be a limited impact."
Today, the opposition staged a walkout of a parliamentary session, saying Singh had misled the House in 2008 by claiming that lawmakers had not been bribed.
But the BJP hasn't escaped the scandal unscathed. Shortly after the first revelation, WikiLeaks released cables that suggested the opposition party publicly slammed the nuclear deal but privately reassured the Americans they were OK with it.
"The result of all this is that even the opposition party has no moral authority," Bhushan said.
The BJP has denied engaging in any hypocrisy.
http://www.aolnews.com/2011/03/22/wikileaks-cables-cause-uproar-in-india-over-nuke-deal-with-us/
Cumulative list of blogposts with label 'Thorium' (May 24, 2013):
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2013/05/ban-export-of-beach-sand-minerals-bjp.html Ban export of beach sand minerals: BJP MP Hansraj Ahir
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2013/05/great-thorium-robbery-ongoing.html Great thorium robbery, ongoing...
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2013/03/great-rare-earths-robbery-in-india.htmlGreat Rare Earths' robbery in India. Fight by a citizens' forum
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2013/01/citizens-petition-for-action-against.htmlCitizens' petition for action against perpetrators of the Great Rare Earths' Robbery in India
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2013/01/china-moving-to-thorium-as-safe-nuclear.htmlChina moving to thorium as safe nuclear fuel. GOI, protect and use India's thorium reserves for energy needs of Indian Ocean Community.
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2013/01/china-blazes-trail-for-clean-nuclear.htmlChina blazes trail for 'clean' nuclear power from thorium
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/12/dae-oct-2012-reply-on-thorium-loot-full.htmlDAE's Oct. 2012 reply on Thorium loot full of loopholes. DAE is yet to explain how Atomic Minerals list was changed without Parliament approval.
Is safe, green thorium power finally ready for prime time? -- John Hewitt
Thorium, China, Environment , Energy Takashi Kamei (Video 33:47)
Illegal notification of 18 Jan. 2006 on Atomic Minerals and loot of Rs. 96,120 Crores worth Atomic Minerals - Complaints
Govt. of India should act now to stop illegal mining of Atomic Minerals
India announces plan to build thorium reactor. Congrats to India's nuclear scientists.
Illegal mining of Atomic minerals worth Rs. 96,120 crores
Submit views/suggestions on Mines and Minerals (Development and Regulation) Bill No. 110 of 2011
Cause and effect: a case study in and dossiers on Rare earths/Atomic Minerals of India
DAE, cancel and withdraw an illegal notification issued in January 2006.
Atomic minerals include thorium, uranium, monazite, zircon, ilmenite, rutile and leucoxene (Part B of First Schedule of the Act 1957)
PM should ban placer sands mining, nationalise minerals of national importance consistent with Shah Commission recommendations on manganese/iron ore mining
Our nuclear program will be thorium based - APJ Abdul Kalam
Protection of thorium & other rare earth minerals - Swamy refutes DAE claims
‘Our policy is to reprocess all the fuel put into a nuclear reactor’ -- Sekhar Basu
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/10/protection-of-thorium-reserves-in.html
Protection of thorium and rare earth reserves in the country
Cheap nuclear energy is an illusion -- Kumar Chellappan
DAE Press release : Export of Monazite from India. India backtracks on involving private miners in monazite - Ajoy K Das
Thorium loot: No private parties permitted to produce monazite, says DAE
Cheap,abundant & very safe nuclear power.....Thorium
Protection of thorium reserves in the country
Thorium loot spells strategic loss
Kerala Metals and Minerals Ltd causing radiation: PIL
Separation of monazite from placer sands and strategic needs of India's energy programme.
Nuclear Thorium: Country needs thorium-based fast breeders -- Dr. Kalam
Near monopoly position of a company in garnet placer sands
Estimated value of Manavalakurichi placer sands loot in a decade: Rs. 1 lakh crore
Placer sands exports detailed in a Criminal Petition in Hon’ble Supreme Court
Govt. misled Parliament on thorium loot. Thorium a game changer for India's power needs?
Export profiles of placer sands of Manavalakurichi complex
Rare earth complex of India -- containing thorium, the strategic nuclear fuel
India's nuclear energy through thorium. Powering the world.
Thorium could have powered India
Power of Thorium - two books reviewed. 'Super Fuel':Martin. ‘Thorium: energy cheaper than coal’: Robert Hargraves
Thorium UPA's new coalgate?
How far off is thorium energy? It is producing energy already -- in many reactors of India...
India all set to tap thorium resources
India-Canada Nuke pact. "Those days are gone. We're not so stupid," Dr. Chaitanyamoy Ganguly, Nuclear scientist.
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/09/thorium-to-transform-nuclear-power-pair.html Thorium to transform nuclear power. A pair of MIT students set up Transatomic Power
Cumulative list of blogposts with label "Thorium" (September 27, 2012). National imperative of protecting Rare earths including thorium.
Thorium -- a nuclear fuel and iPhone are born of Mother Earth. Govt. of India, conserve and protect rare earths including thorium.
Take steps to protect strategic monazite reserves: Subramanian Swamy to PM
Thorium and imperative of national security - Dr. Swamy's letter to PM
Thorium as strategic mineral: a greener alternative to uranium. India should protect her thorium reserves.
DAE makes strides towards thorium fuel supplies for AHWR
‘Thorium figures unconfirmed’ - IREL
VVER: Voda Voda Energo Reactor, Water-cooled, water-moderated energy reactor
Protect India's thorium to transform the world of energy
A future energy giant? India's thorium-based nuclear plans
India should enforce NSG guidelines for protection of thorium
Nuclear Energy’s Future: Thorium
Q&A: Thorium Reactor Designer Ratan Kumar Sinha
Thorium-fuelled dreams for India’s energy future. How India’s science is taking over the world.
Thorium poster (Source: Thorium Australia campaign)
Protect India's thorium. Briefings on nuclear technology in India -- PK Iyengar, Retd. Chairman, AEC, May 2009
New All-Party UK Parliamentary Group on Thorium
China Takes Lead in Race for Clean Nuclear Power -- using thorium.
The issue is India as nuke power. Anti-Kudankulam leaders manipulate innocents - Pioneer Edit
India Ventures Into Rare Earths, To Launch Soon Monazite Processing Plant
Thorium is nuclear fuel and should command immediate attention of GOI to conserve and protect the wealth of the nation.
Thorium key to India’s energy security -- Sandhya Jain
Thorium advocates launch pressure group in UK. India plans nuclear plant powered bythorium - Guardian, UK
Feature article: A Thorium Reactor (American Scientist, 2010)
Thorium As Nuclear Fuel
Thoriumgate. 34 blogposts. Seize the moment to strengthen India's nuclear doctrine and energy future.
Is Thorium the Biggest Energy Breakthrough Since Fire? Possibly.
Are beachfuls of thorium sand a curse? -- Rrishi Raote
Why should foreign companies & private parties work in monazite placer deposits?
Karisastha koil, Kundal, Uvari
Thorium for dummies. Thorium reactors - Dr. Y (Federation of American Scientists)
UPA's Thoriumgate? Toyota Tsusho enters the scene.
Monazite reserves of India 18 Million Tonnes (A review of seabed and placer mining deposits in India by Abhineet Kumar (May, 2011. Dept. of Mining Engineering, National Institute of Technology, Rourkela, 2011)
Thorium which can breed uranium 233 is the future energy source for India. Rare earth elements; Indian rare earths -- Its genesis and growth (TK Mukherjee, IREL)
Proof that coir was used to export thorium oxide in monazite. Now Toyota is inmonazite processing in India.
Wyoming nuclear task force hears thorium reactor plan
Indian rare earths: genesis and growth -- TK Mukherjee, IREL
Who looted India’s missing thorium? -- Sandeep Balakrishna
After coal, did India give away Thorium at pittance too?
Great thorium robbery impacting India's nuclear doctrine and energy security
67 Years Nuclear Energy, Nuclear Destruction
$15 billion hole in ground. Thorium for clean energy
Thorium Reserve in the Country - Narayanasamy informs Lok Sabha
Thorium-fuelled dreams for India's energy future. How India's science is taking over the world.
Nuclear materials, suppliers group (NSG) and safeguards
Depletion of thorium reserves from South Indian beaches, impacting India's nucleardoctrine and energy security: 14 blogposts
Black Monazite sand deposits found on beaches (India)
Thorium fuel cycle - potential benefits for India - IAEA publication (2005)
Thorium: alleged export of sands (August 2007 report)
Key reserve profiles of placer deposits: Chavara and Manavalakurichi (From Ph.D. thesis of Ajith G. Nair, 2001)
Valmiki's knowledge of oceanography and Mannar volcanic
Mining of monazite (GOI response in Lok Sabha on 30 Nov. 2011)
Indian Rare Earths Limited
VV Mineral: achievements
There’s nuclear gold in this sand. And it’s being sent out with impunity – Tehelka
Manavalakurichi
Scam of the century involving Rs. 1340 billion thorium reserves. Irregularities inbureaucratic processes which led to encouragement of illegal mining of thorium
10-point plan: Nationalise thorium resources of India and institute strategic command for protecting and conserving Nuclear Fuel complexes
Illegal thorium mining in India. Value of India’s thorium reserves: Rs. 1340 billion est.
‘PM must look into illegal thorium mining’
Uranium Is So Last Century — Enter Thorium, the New Green Nuke | Magazine