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Ignoring CPIM's official line opposing scrapping of the Koodankulam
Nuclear Power Plant, party veteran V S Achuthanandan today said atomic plants
were "very dangerous" and he would visit the coastal town in Tamil
Nadu to pledge support to the ongoing stir against the plant."They (nuclear power plants) are very dangerous. I will
go there though the date of visit has not been decided", the 88-year-old
leader told reporters here.Achuthanandan's comments came even as the CPI-M organ
"Deshabhimani" today carried an article by party General Secretary
Prakash Karat spelling out the party's stand on the issue - opposing the demand
for scrapping KKNPP."The demand for closure of the plant after all the
works are completed by spending Rs 15,000 crore is neither practical nor would
serve the country's interests", Karat said.He said his party was not opposed to nuclear energy as such
but their safety should be assured and the technological and financial
advantages taken into due account.Since India had developed the nuclear technology on its own
there was no need to import reactors, he said.In the case of Koodankulam, he wanted the authorities to
make a serious note of the safety concerns expressed by the local people and
said the party was opposed to unleashing repressive measures against the
agitators and slapping sedition charges against them.People's anxieties would not be removed till they were
assured of foolproof safety measures and the safety audit report published, he
said.Instead of doing that, the state and the central governments
have adopted an approach of suppressing the agitation by use of police force,
which the CPI(M) could not accept, Karat said.Assuming a sharply divergent position, Achuthanandan said
there was no change in his stand that nuclear power plants are dangerous.He wanted the Government in India to follow the model set by
Japanese Government which had closed down the nuclear energy plants after
Fukushima disaster.Earlier, Achuthanandan was restrained by the party from
visiting Koodankulam, about 130 km from here, to lend support to the agitation
spearheaded by Peoples Movement Against Nuclear Energy (PMANE).
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