CANBERRA, Australia — Any Australian uranium sales to Russia would meet  nonproliferation requirements, but the government remains firmly against sales  to India, Trade Minister Simon Crean said Friday.
The government on  Thursday rejected a 2008 parliamentary report's recommendation that Australia  not proceed with an agreement to sell uranium to Russia.
The report  expressed concerns that the uranium could be stolen or diverted for weapons  use.
The government said it has not yet made a final decision on whether  to ratify the agreement, signed in 2007 by former Prime Minister John Howard and  Russian President Vladimir Puton, who is now Russia's prime minister.
But  it said the agreement met Australia's long-standing condition that the country's  uranium only be used for peaceful purposes.
"We have taken considerable  time on our part to ensure we're satisfied, the International Atomic Energy  Agency is satisfied, that the strictest of safeguards are in place," Crean told  Australian Broadcasting Corp. television on Friday.
But Crean said  Australia would not restart negotiations with India on uranium sales to fuel its  expanding nuclear power industry.
Howard's conservative government  started negotiations with India on uranium sales just months before Prime  Minister Kevin Rudd's center-left government was swept to power in 2007  elections but ruled out exports unless it signs the Nuclear Nonproliferation  Treaty.
"The signal to India ... is that this is the way in which they  can be recipients of our supply and it's for India to respond to that," Crean  said.
If the Russian agreement is submitted to Parliament for  ratification, it is expected to easily pass because the main opposition party  backs nuclear trade with Moscow.
Environmentalists including the  Australian Conservation Foundation, however, oppose uranium exports to Russia.
 
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