West Indies' Shivnarine Chanderpaul :ICC Cricketer of the Year
South Africa's Dale Steyn : ICC Test Player of the Year
India's one-day captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni : ICC ODI Player of the Year award.
India's Yuvraj Singh inaugural winner of ICC Twenty20 International Performance of the Year Award
Sri Lanka's 23-year-old spin star, Ajantha Mendis:ICC Emerging Player of the Year award
Australian umpire,Simon Taufel: ICC Umpire of the Year for the fifth successive time
England captain Charlotte Edwards: ICC Women's Cricketer of the Year award
Netherlands allrounder, Ryan ten Doeschate: ICC Associate Player of the Year.
Sri Lanka team : ICC Spirit of Cricket Award
ICC Test Team of the Year: Graeme Smith (SA, capt), Virender Sehwag (Ind), Mahela Jayawardene (SL), Shivnarine Chanderpaul (WI), Kevin Pietersen (Eng), Jacques Kallis (SA), Kumar Sangakkara (SL, wk), Brett Lee (Aus), Ryan Sidebottom (Eng), Dale Steyn (SA), Muttiah Muralitharan (SL). 12th man: Stuart Clark (Aus).
ICC ODI Team of the Year :Hershelle Gibbs (SA), Sachin Tendulkar (Ind), Ricky Ponting (Aus, capt), Younis Khan (Pak), Andrew Symonds (Aus), Mahendra Singh Dhoni (Ind, wk), Farveez Maharoof (SL), Daniel Vettori (NZ), Brett Lee (Aus), Mitchell Johnson (Aus), Nathan Bracken (Aus). 12th man: Salman Butt (Pak)
Saturday, September 13, 2008
US evades nuclear fuel supplies issue
The US is yet to give a definitive word about President George Bush's controversial assertion that US assurances to India about reliable supply of nuclear fuel were "political commitments" and not legally binding.
"It's a letter from the president to the Congress. I'll refer you over to the White House for an answer," State Department spokesman Sean McCormack said Friday when asked about Bush's assertion in a message asking the Congress to approve the India-US civil nuclear deal.
In the face of controversy triggered by Bush's message, India has maintained that working with the US in civil nuclear cooperation India will be guided by the 123 Agreement alone.
"India-US civil nuclear cooperation will be carried out on the basis of the respective rights and obligations of the two sides as contained in the Agreement," External Affairs Ministry spokesperson Navtej Sarna stated in New Delhi Friday.
"By doing so, the Government will ensure that India's rights are fully protected," he said.
In his message forwarding the implementing agreement, Bush said: "In Article 5(6) the Agreement records certain political commitments concerning reliable supply of nuclear fuel given to India Agreement does not, however, transform these political commitments into legally binding commitments because the Agreement, like other US agreements of its type, is intended as a framework agreement."
When pressed on the issue, "if President Bush sends a letter, a cover letter on the deal, and says something, is that binding on the deal? Like, does it hold?" McCormack said: "It's all a matter of the public record."
"We've had good discussions with the Indian government on this matter, the 123 agreement, as well as a number of other issues. And we're going to be providing quite a bit of information there... We have to the US Congress," McCormack said.
"And there's going to be testimony during that process. I'll let that testimony and the information that we've provided the Congress speak for itself," he added.
Asked whether the reference to "sensitive technologies" in the president's letter referred to enrichment and reprocessing technologies, McCormack said, "Again, the cover letter speaks for itself. I'm not going to have anything to add to it."
There was no comment from the White House either as the issue did not come up at the Deputy Press Secretary Tony Fratto's briefing to the media travelling with Bush to Oklahoma.
The State Department also said the Indo-US nuclear deal was a topic of conversation between Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and her Russian counterpart Sergei Lavrov.
"I'm not going to get into the details of it, but, of course, Russia is a member of the board of governors of the International Atomic Energy Agency. They play an important role," the spokesman said.
"The IAEA played an important role in moving this agreement forward. And the secretary's message, basic message, was this agreement was good for India, good for the United States, good for the international (non-proliferation) regime," he said.
"It's a letter from the president to the Congress. I'll refer you over to the White House for an answer," State Department spokesman Sean McCormack said Friday when asked about Bush's assertion in a message asking the Congress to approve the India-US civil nuclear deal.
In the face of controversy triggered by Bush's message, India has maintained that working with the US in civil nuclear cooperation India will be guided by the 123 Agreement alone.
"India-US civil nuclear cooperation will be carried out on the basis of the respective rights and obligations of the two sides as contained in the Agreement," External Affairs Ministry spokesperson Navtej Sarna stated in New Delhi Friday.
"By doing so, the Government will ensure that India's rights are fully protected," he said.
In his message forwarding the implementing agreement, Bush said: "In Article 5(6) the Agreement records certain political commitments concerning reliable supply of nuclear fuel given to India Agreement does not, however, transform these political commitments into legally binding commitments because the Agreement, like other US agreements of its type, is intended as a framework agreement."
When pressed on the issue, "if President Bush sends a letter, a cover letter on the deal, and says something, is that binding on the deal? Like, does it hold?" McCormack said: "It's all a matter of the public record."
"We've had good discussions with the Indian government on this matter, the 123 agreement, as well as a number of other issues. And we're going to be providing quite a bit of information there... We have to the US Congress," McCormack said.
"And there's going to be testimony during that process. I'll let that testimony and the information that we've provided the Congress speak for itself," he added.
Asked whether the reference to "sensitive technologies" in the president's letter referred to enrichment and reprocessing technologies, McCormack said, "Again, the cover letter speaks for itself. I'm not going to have anything to add to it."
There was no comment from the White House either as the issue did not come up at the Deputy Press Secretary Tony Fratto's briefing to the media travelling with Bush to Oklahoma.
The State Department also said the Indo-US nuclear deal was a topic of conversation between Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and her Russian counterpart Sergei Lavrov.
"I'm not going to get into the details of it, but, of course, Russia is a member of the board of governors of the International Atomic Energy Agency. They play an important role," the spokesman said.
"The IAEA played an important role in moving this agreement forward. And the secretary's message, basic message, was this agreement was good for India, good for the United States, good for the international (non-proliferation) regime," he said.
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