India,
China resolve to improve communication
India
and China have resolved to improve communication with each other and identified
West Asia, Central Asia and Africa as areas where they would hold regular
dialogue.
With
Russia, India touched on most subjects but refrained from addressing issues
relating to Kudankulam III and IV units, although most issues have been sorted
out.
This
emerged during bilateral meetings Prime Minister Manmohan Singh had with
Chinese President Hu Jintao and Russian President Dmitry Medvedev which are a
staple fare during multilateral conferences such as the BRICS summit that
concluded on 29.03.2012.
At a
60-minute meeting with Mr. Hu, Dr. Singh agreed that there must be stronger
communication between both countries so as to remove suspicions about each
other’s intentions.
In
Central Asia, China has been spectacularly successful in its sourcing of hydrocarbons
and India is also actively scouting for opportunities.
In
Africa too, both countries are looking for opportunities in the minerals and
hydrocarbons sectors.
With the
dominant western narrative pitching both countries against each other in these
regions and this view being taken up by think tanks here, the opening of
dialogue to add to the subjects of maritime cooperation and sharing of
oceanographic research data agreed upon last month would help provide more
realistic inputs to the decision-making apparatus of both nations.
Mr. Hu
agreed that trade imbalance must be addressed and promised that China would
facilitate more Indian exports to its market.
Invites
investments
With
Planning Commission Deputy Chairman Montek Singh Ahluwalia holding talks with
National Development and Reform Commission Zhang Ping earlier in the day, both
leaders were suitably briefed about each other’s economic priorities. Dr. Singh
invited Chinese investments in manufacturing and infrastructure sectors, two
areas where Beijing is strong but has felt stymied by New Delhi’s rules and
procedures.
On the
border issue, they agreed that the current mechanism of Special
Representative-level talks should continue and meantime, both sides must ensure
peace and tranquillity on the border.
With Mr.
Medvedev, who like Mr. Hu is on his last visit to India as President, the talks
lasted for 45 minutes and began with both appreciating the direction BRICS was
taking. In fact the prospects of the five-country organisations dominated the
interaction but the two leaders touched on trade, and civil nuclear
cooperation. Defence cooperation came at the fag end of the talks.
The
Russian President raised the issue of cancellation of 2G telecom licences by
the Supreme Court that has also affected Sistema, a company close to the
Kremlin and in which Moscow has invested a substantial amount.
Mr.
Medvedev and Dr. Singh felt satisfied over the sorting of problems relating to
the first two units of Kudankulam civil nuclear plant but did not touch on the next
two units due to the Prime Minister’s continuing apprehension over the
protests.
China
mourns death but blames it on Dalai Lama
Despite
Tibetan refugees trying to disrupt the visit of the Chinese President at every
possible opportunity, senior officials from Beijing mourned the death of a
protester after he immolated himself. At the same time, they regretted that
Dalai Lama and his “so-called pro-independence” elements were trying to
encourage fanatical behaviour by “glorifying this kind of extreme behaviour.”
At a
press conference here, senior Chinese Ministry official Luo Zhaohui said such
protests were not in keeping with the atmospherics of a multilateral summit.
BRICS
agreements
While
making a strong statement on Iran and adopting a middle-of-the-road resolution
on Syria, the fourth summit of BRICS largely eschewed political content and
focussed on economic and development issues which included beginning the
process for setting up a bank and inking two pacts to ease trade among each
other.
The
Delhi Declaration issued at the end of the one-day summit hinted at backing an
alternative candidate for the World Bank President’s post which has always been
appropriated by an American and exhorted the Bank and the International
Monetary Fund to quickly realign their priorities and approach to the needs of
the developing world. This is an agenda the five countries intend pursuing at
the coming G-20 meeting in Mexico as well.
The
leaders of BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa) who held a
closed door meeting that overran the allotted time, weighed the consequences of
setting up a “BRICS Bank” and opted for a more contemplative approach by asking
their Finance Ministers to examine its feasibility and report back at the next
summit in Russia. Sources said the leaders agreed that the bank should in no
way emerge as a competitor to the World Bank and the IMF but provide funds for
projects that do not find favour with these institutions.
In line
with their professed commitment to multilateralism in economic and political
problem solving, the leaders agreed to invest more in the United Nations
Conference on Trade & Development (UNCTAD) which played a major role in
catering to the interests of developing countries in the run-up to the setting
up of the World Trade Organisation.
The
five-nation grouping’s formulation on Iran came close to condemning the West’s
pressure tactics to make other countries obey their latest restrictions on
trade ties, especially in the energy sphere. Saying that a conflict would have
disastrous consequences, it wanted the two antagonists to resolve suspicions
over Iran’s nuclear programme through talks on multilateral fora.
On
Afghanistan, BRICS exhorted the international community to stay the course on
the development front for 10 years after the West withdraws most of its combat
troops by 2014-end and, on Russia’s insistence, made a mention of checking
narcotic trafficking.
Supply-side
constraints may hit BRICS: PM, India
Prime
Minister Manmohan Singh identified supply-side factors such as energy, food,
water and capital that could upset the growth story of BRICS (Brazil, Russia,
India, China and South Africa) in the medium term. “Our responses to these
challenges may be different but there is much common interest that binds us all
together.” Though the positive BRICS narrative was based on a model of catch-up
growth, the supply side factors could impede the entire story, he cautioned,
inaugurating the fourth BRICS Summit here.
The
Prime Minister advocated reforms in most global institutions and active sharing
of expertise among the five nations to overcome the adverse effects of supply
side factors in not just the developing world but Europe as well.
Greater
interaction
Intra-BRICS
complementarities could be leveraged by promoting greater business-to-business
interaction, liberal business visas, removing barriers to trade and investment
flows and avoiding protectionist measures. “Inevitably, we will handle the
problem differently, but it may be useful for us to share experiences in this
area,” Dr. Singh said.
But
continued prosperity of BRICS was also linked to the geopolitical environment.
“In our restricted session, we discussed the ongoing turmoil in West Asia and
agreed to work together for a peaceful resolution of the crisis. We must avoid
political disruptions that create volatilities in global energy markets and
affect trade flows,” he concluded.
China
welcomes India’s commitment on two sources of friction
China
said it welcomed commitments made by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh during talks
on 29.03.2012 that India would neither participate in any “containment
strategy” aimed at China nor allow anti-China activities by exiled Tibetans.
In a
reflection of what Beijing views as among the two more delicate issues facing
the bilateral relationship with New Delhi – India’s ties with the U.S. and
Tibet – the Chinese Foreign Ministry highlighted Dr. Singh’s comments as
suggesting an increase in political trust between the neighbours.
The
Indian Prime Minister conveyed that “India has no intention and will not
participate in any strategy aimed at containing China” in the meeting with
Chinese President Hu Jintao in New Delhi on the sidelines of the BRICS
(Brazil-Russia-India-China-South Africa) Summit, Foreign Ministry spokesperson Hong
Lei said at a briefing.
BRICS
development bank
Chinese
officials and the media welcomed agreements reached at the BRICS summit on
financial cooperation.
The deal
between banks of five countries to formalise cooperation in local currency
lending would “further facilitate trade and investment”, Chen Yuan, chairman of
the China Development Bank, was quoted as saying by the State-run Xinhua news
agency.
“Using
our own currencies to issue loans and settle payments can minimise exposure to
exchange rate fluctuations, reduce our reliance on third-party currencies, and
facilitate trade and investment,” he said, adding that member banks had
“actively implemented” the framework agreement on financial cooperation agreed
to at the previous summit in Sanya.
The five
countries also agreed to ask their finance ministers to conduct feasibility
studies into the setting up of a BRICS development bank and report
back by the next summit. The agreement fell short of expectations that the
Delhi Summit would yield a more concrete outcome on long-running discussion on
the bank.
Dream
Dare Win
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