FOREIGN POLICY: New, Strong and Clear Outreach

sorcerer

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:D
pakistan power company is known to run profit making entities.
Its a super good move by Maldives.
Power consumers bearing the cost as Disco losses soar to Rs213 billion

https://profit.pakistantoday.com.pk...e-cost-as-disco-losses-soar-to-rs213-billion/

Pakistan power sector losses will bulge to Rs360 billion in 2018

https://profit.pakistantoday.com.pk...r-losses-will-bulge-to-rs360-billion-in-2018/

pakistan cant afford the chinese friendship
Maldives sure can afford the chinese Fraaandship.
Also the power companies of china which produce electricity to pakistan is selling it so cheap that pakistanis cant afford it.and the chinese companies are planning to shift out.

Maldives should sure vector into the business model of pakistan.
 

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World’s Largest Mobile Phone Factory Set to Open in India

Samsung Electronics Co., the South Korean maker of Galaxy phones, said it is opening the world’s largest mobile phone manufacturing facility on the outskirts of the Indian capital, as smartphone demand surges.

The factory will be inaugurated by Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and South Korean President Moon Jae-in at 5 p.m.:india::india: local time. Both leaders are visiting the facility adjoining New Delhi, according to India’s ministry of external affairs.


“The opportunity is just massive," said Faisal Kawoosa, who heads new initiatives at researcher CMR Pvt. “Such a large facility will help Samsung cater to the huge demand in a country of 1.3 billion people where there are only 425 million smartphone users."

Since taking power in 2014, Modi has pushed his "Make in India" initiative, which encourages companies to set up plants in the country, as the nation attempts to bolster domestic manufacturing. India attracted the highest ever foreign direct investment in the past year with inflows totalling $62 billion.

shipments of 124 million units in 2017, the fastest pace of growth among the top 20 markets, according to International Data Corp. Demand for new phones is surging in India, helped in part by billionaire Mukesh Ambani offering $23 4G feature-phones, free voice services and cheap data plans. Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi Corp. said in April it will set up three more factories in India.

The new Samsung factory will have the capacity to fabricate 120 million smartphones per year, and make everything from low-end smartphones that cost under $100 to the company’s flagship S9 model, according to the company.

Indians favor low-end smartphones priced at $250 or less, given the low average annual income of its people, according to Bloomberg Intelligence. That’s one reason why Apple Inc. has struggled to gain market share in India, with most iPhone models priced beyond $500, according to a Bloomberg Intelligence report earlier this month.

Last year, India overtook the U.S. last year to become the world’s second-largest smartphone market after China. There will be 780 million connected smartphones in 2021, compared with 359 million in 2016, according to a study by Cisco Systems.


https://www.bloomberg.com/news/arti...est-mobile-phone-factory-set-to-open-in-india
 

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India, Bahrain make pharma a key area of cooperation

In an important boost to the Indian healthcare industry, India and Bahrain on Sunday agreed to make pharmaceuticals a key area of cooperation following the second High Joint Commission meeting led by External Affairs Minister Susham Swaraj and Bahraini Foreign Minister Shaikh Khalid Bin Ahmed Bin Mohamed Al Khalifa in Manama.

"Bahrain and India agreed to explore opportunities healthcare industry and welcomed the signing of an MoU for cooperation in the field of healthcare, which would contribute in expanding the cooperation between the two countries making pharmaceuticals a key priority area in the bilateral relations," said a joint statement issued following the meeting.

The two sides also signed an MoU on renewable energy even as Bahrain congratulated Sushma Swaraj on launching of the International Solar Alliance (ISA) by Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

Launched by Modi and then French President Francois Hollande at the Paris climate summit in 2015, the ISA was conceived as a coalition of solar resource-rich countries to address their special energy needs and provide a platform to collaborate on dealing with the identified gaps through a common, agreed approach.

India and Bahrain also noted the existing potential for two-way investments and reaffirmed their desire to provide favourable environment for investments, both from public and private sectors, from the two countries, the statement said.

"Both sides agreed on the importance of regular and timely exchange of information on available investment opportunities," it said.

It said that both sides discussed in detail various aspects of bilateral relations including "ways and means to expand cooperation in the fields of education, health, housing, renewable energy, space cooperation, tourism, culture, youth and sports, women empowerment, customs, oil and gas and petrochemicals; security, defence and intelligence training and exchange of expertise, cooperation between universities in both countries and the possible exchange of researchers and faculty members in the fields of food security, cyber space and energy".

Both the countries also reiterated their condemnation of terrorism in all its forms and manifestations and called all states to reject and abandon the use of terrorism against other countries.

"The two sides agreed to work together for the early adoption of India's proposed Comprehensive Convention on International Terrorism at the United Nations," the statement said.

During the meeting, Bahrain Foreign Minister Shaikh Khalifa lauded the role of the Indian expatriate community's role in his country's development.

"FM Shaikh Khalifa praised the contribution of Indian community settled in Bahrain towards the economic development of Bahrain," External Affairs Ministry spokesperson Raveesh Kumar tweeted.

Bahrain is home to around 350,000 Indian nationals, the largest expatriate community in the Gulf Kingdom, and more than 3,000 Indian-owned or joint venture companies.

Bilateral trade between India and Bahrain stood at over $875 million as of February this year, according to figures provided by the External Affairs Ministry.

India's total capital investment into Bahrain between January 2003 and March 2018 has been estimated at $1.69 billion.

On Saturday, the first day of her two-day visit to Bahrain, Sushma Swaraj, along with Shaikh Khalifa, inaugurated the new Indian Embassy complex in Manama.

"The new developments that have taken place in the economic field in the two countries, will take economic relations to greater heights," she said in her address at the ceremony.
Published Date: Jul 16th, 2018 12:55 PM | Updated Date: Jul 16, 2018 12:55 PM IST



https://www.cnbctv18.com/economy/india-bahrain-make-pharma-a-key-area-of-cooperation-316771.htm
 

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Russia will work with India for localisation of equipment for Nuclear Power Plants

Indian construction companies will take part in tenders for construction and installation works, said Andrey.
What is the current status of the Kudankulam project? What is progress for Units 3 to 6 ?

The Kudankulam Nuclear Power Plant (KNPP) is one of the largest nuclear power station in India. It is scheduled to have six VVER-1000 reactors with an installed capacity of 1,000 MW each. The Unit 1 of the plant was synchronised with the southern power grid in October 2013 and is generating electricity. The second Unit with capacity 1,000 MW had become critical for the first time in July 2016. It was connected to the grid in August 2016 and it started commercial operation in October 2016.

The construction of Units 3 and 4 are underway. The ‘first pour of concrete’ for Unit 3 of the Kudankulam Nuclear Power Plant, which marks the beginning of the construction of the project, happened on June 29, 2017. The Units 3 and 4 Reactor buildings foundation slabs have already been made. The construction is on schedule.

The delivery of equipment has already started. In March 2018 the first batch of equipment for turbine building of Unit 3 of Kudankulam NPP was completed and shipped out. Particularly, the first two high pressure heaters (HPH) were dispatched for turbine building of KKNPP. Also the reactor pressure vessel for KNPP Unit 3 will be delivered by the end of the current year followed by KNPP Unit 4 that will be completed next year.

Last year, during the 18th annual India-Russia summit held in St Petersburg, both countries signed the general framework agreement for the construction of Units 5 and 6 of KKNPP and an inter-governmental credit protocol necessary for the implementation of the project was also signed. Currently intensive ground and infrastructural work is underway for Unit 5 and 6.


How is heavy equipment for KNPP transported from Russia to India?


Each shipment of heavy and/or oversized cargo is a unique technological operation. Russian experts have studied a number of different options for delivering such equipment to the site. Nowadays, the cargo is shipped to the port of Thoothukudi, and then delivered to the site by roads.At the same time, NPCIL is developing port infrastructure near the site of the Kudankulam Nuclear Power Plant. The facility is likely to be commissioned this year.


What are the enhanced safety features of KNPP?

VVER reactors are considered to be among the safest in the world, this technology is the base of the Russia’s nuclear power development program and contributes to the export growth. Over the 50 years of their operation the NPPs with VVER reactors (VVER-440, VVER-1000) have proven their reliability, stability and competitiveness in the international energy market, ensuring stable growth of the nuclear industry. The experience of successfully operating NPPs with VVER-type reactors has already exceeded 1,400 accident-free reactor-years.

The Russian nuclear power plant projects use light water reactors of the VVER type (water-cooled water-moderated shell-type reactors with pressurized water). At present, VVER nuclear power plants are under various stages of construction in Iran, Belarus, Hungary, Bangladesh and other countries. This type of reactors uses water both as a neutron moderator and as a reactor coolant.

On India’s request, additional safety measures are being put in place in Units 3 and 4 to withstand even higher seismic, climatic and technical impact. All power units are equipped with the modern diagnostics systems, which prevent the anticipated operational occurrences before they start. The main feature of the Indian project is a unique combination of active and passive safety systems that provide maximum resilience against external and internal impacts, including tornadoes, hurricanes, earthquakes and even an aircraft crash. Therefore, we can firmly state that presently India possesses the safest NPP in the world.

Passive safety systems are able to function even under conditions of complete power failure ensuring complete safety even without the contribution of the active safety systems or (human) operational intervention. For example, the Passive Heat Removal System (PHRS) provides long-term heat removal from the reactor core in case of all the power sources’ shutdown. A molten core catcher (MCC) or a “melt trap” is designed to keep the molten core material inside and cool it down in case of a hypothetical accident that could lead to the core damage. A core catcher ensures the integrity of the containment vessel, preventing radioactive leaks into the environment, even in case of a hypothetical severe accident.

The huge attention has been focused towards preservation of biological diversity around KNPP and save local flora and fauna of the Mannar Bay. NPP cooling sea water intake structures are equipped with the special fish protecting facilities, which preserve not only fish but also fish food plankton. Sea water is supplied from the so called “bucket” constructed in the sea into the special facilities and systems which ensures that fish and plankton return to sea.

Rosatom’s fuel company TVEL has announced that it has now the new fuel TVS-2M for VVER-1000 reactors, which will be installed at the Kudankulam Nuclear Power Plant. What is the difference between the old fuel and a new one?

TVS-2M gives an opportunity to shift the nuclear power plant from operation in 12 months to 18 months fuel cycle. Right now, the fuel campaign consists of three cycles, each lasting for twelve months. After introduction of TVS-2M, we will have three cycles lasting for 18 months, so instead of three years, the fuel campaign will last for 4.5 years (54 months instead of 36 months).

Secondly, TVS-2M fuel bundles have more advanced thermal-mechanical behavior during the whole fuel life. This fuel model is more robust, it has a higher stiffness. So during the exploitation in the reactor core a fuel bundle does not bow and preserves its initial shape. Thus, we have made the reactor operation more safe and reliable.


How many more units is ROSATOM planning to build in India?

The Strategic Vision adopted in December 2014 for strengthening cooperation in the peaceful use of atomic energy between Russia and India stipulates that at least 12 units of Russian design are to be commissioned in India within the next 20 years. As far as we know, the Indian government is actively searching for sites to build new power plants. In 2015, India declared its intent to allot a new site for the construction of power plant of Russian design with enhanced-capacity units. We are awaiting the new site to be officially presented by the Indian side to the Russian side and further signing of the contracts. Now we are holding talks on the design of the new nuclear power plant units as well as preparing the proposal regarding the localization of the equipment.



Are there any plans for to work together with India on other markets?

Besides the KNPP, we are working together with India for the construction of the first nuclear power plant in Bangladesh at Rooppur. This year in March the trilateral agreement was signed by India, Russia and Bangladesh. The document establishes the basis for the interaction of the Russian contractor ASE Group of Companies with Indian and Bangladeshi specialists in the implementation of the project. In particular, the parties plan to cooperate in personnel training, experience sharing and consulting support. Under the agreement, Indian companies will participate in construction and installation work, supply of non-critical materials and equipment for the project.

Bangladesh also signed two intergovernmental and inter-agency agreements with India, according to which India’s Global Centre for Nuclear Energy Partnership (GCNEP) will provide training and consulting services for the implementation of the Rooppur NPP project.

India will join the project as a subcontractor. Indian construction companies will take part in tenders for construction and installation works. At the same time, the Indian party can provide consulting support and share experience with the Bangladesh specialists within the Rooppur NPP project.


Are there any other areas for cooperation between India and Russia in the field of peaceful nuclear energy?



The last few years have been fruitful in terms of identifying new areas for cooperation between Indian companies and ROSATOM's enterprise. We have also achieved success in developing and producing composite materials. The Umatex Group, another subsidiary of Rosatom State Atomic Energy Corporation, signed an agreement with Indian companies on localizing the production of carbon fabric in India. This will allow us to cut costs and export joint Indo-Russian products. The development and production of mass-market products made of composite materials is stipulated as well, including helmets and high-pressure containers.

Furthermore, we are closely working on integrated security systems intended for organization of alarm security subsystems, monitoring of access control subsystems, monitoring of CCTV subsystems, performance of warning function. NIKIRET (branch of Production Company “Start” named after M.V.Protsenko”, a subsidiary of Rosatom State Atomic Energy Corporation) and CORE Energy Systems Pvt. Ltd. signed a cooperation agreement to promote technical security equipment (TSE) in India.



https://economictimes.indiatimes.co...akov-ceo-rosatom-south-asia/articleshow/65556
 

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India rejects Pakistan's objections on two Hydro Power Projects
India has rejected Pakistan's objections on its two hydropower projects on the Chenab river, a Pakistani official said today, as the crucial high-level bilateral talks on the Indus Waters Treaty concluded here.

After the conclusion of talks, the first official engagement between India and Pakistan since Imran Khan became Prime Minister on August 18, Pakistan's Commissioner for Indus Waters Syed Meher Ali Shah told reporters that there would be no briefing and statement on the issue.

"It is a sensitive matter and we were conveyed (by the Foreign Office) not to speak on it. The Foreign Office will issue a statement in this regard," Shah said.

Another official of the Pakistani side, on the condition of anonymity, said India rejected Pakistan's objections on the construction of the 1,000MW Pakal Dul dam and 48MW Lower Kalnal hydropower projects on the Chenab river.

"India has hinted at continuation of work on both the hydropower projects," he said.

"Pakistan may approach the international forums defined in the Indus Waters Treaty over New Delhi's refusal to accept the requests as narrated in the detailed objections," the official said.

Pakistan has made it clear that it will have no option but to appointment neutral experts and take the case to the International Court of Arbitration in case India fails to address its concerns which are genuine, he said.

"Pakistani authorities asked Indians to reduce the height of the Pakal Dul's reservoir up to five metres. India has also been urged to maintain 40-metre height above sea level while making spillways' gates of the Pakal Dul project besides clarifying the pattern and mechanism for the water storage and releases," Dawn quoted one of the participants of the meeting as saying.

"Similarly, Pakistan raised some technical concerns over design of the the Lower Kalnal hydropower project, requesting India to address them at the earliest," the report said.

India was represented by a nine-member delegation of the Indian Water Commission led by Commissioner P K Saxena.

Yesterday, Shah said Pakistan raised objections on the 1000MW Pakal Dul and the 48MW Lower Kalnai hydroelectric projects and a detailed discussion will be held during the talks.

"We had also raised concerns over construction of dams on Pakistani rivers and India did not bother about it and continued doing the same," Shah said, adding India will reply to Pakistan's queries on the controversial water projects.

Former Pakistan Indus Water Commissioner Syed Jamaat Ali Shah told that the successive Pakistani governments had given much importance to its water disputes with India.

"India does not bother about Pakistan's objections. It begins work on building hydro power projects on the Pakistani rivers and the Pakistani government raises objections afterwards. Unless the Pakistani government seriously takes up these matters with India it will not get relief," he said, adding that Pakistan also needs to plead its case in the World Bank.

According to an official of the Pakistan Water Commission, Pakistan has been raising reservations over the designs of the two projects — 1000MW Pakal Dul and 48MW Lower Kalnai hydroelectric projects on River Chenab — and would like India to either modify the designs to make them compliant to the 1960 Indus Waters Treaty or put the projects on hold until New Delhi satisfies Islamabad.

"The two sides will in talks also finalise the schedule of future meetings of the Permanent Indus Commission and visits of the teams of the Indus commissioners," he said.

Pakistan has also challenged the discharge series of River Lower Kalnai at Dunadi for winter months and estimated permissible pondage of 0.38 cubic megametres compared to Indian design pondage of 2.74 cubic megametres.

The Lower Kalnai project is on a left bank tributary of Chenab and can have gross storage of about 1,508 acre feet of water.

The Indian delegation will return to India tomorrow.

The water commissioners of Pakistan and India are required to meet twice a year and arrange technical visits to projects' sites and critical river head works, but Pakistan had been facing a lot of problems in timely meetings and visits.

The last meeting of the Pakistan-India Permanent Indus Commission was held in New Delhi in March during which both the sides had shared details of the water flow and the quantum of water being used under the 1960 Indus Waters Treaty.

India and Pakistan signed the treaty in 1960 after nine years of negotiations, with the World Bank being a signatory.

The treaty sets out a mechanism for cooperation and information exchange between the two countries regarding their use of the rivers. However, there have been disagreements and differences between India and Pakistan over the treaty.

https://economictimes.indiatimes.co...-hydropower-projects/articleshow/65612203.cms
 

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Big boost to India-US relations: Dedicated hotline between Nirmala Sitharaman, Jim Mattis

In a big diplomatic move by India and U.S, the two defence allies will set up two crucial hotlines between Defence Minister Nirmala Sitharaman and US Defence Secretary Jim Mattis and another direct line between Minister of External Affairs Sushma Swaraj and US Secretary of state Mike Pompeo. The formal announcement for the same is likely to be made during the 2+2 dialogue between the two sides scheduled to happen on September 6 in New Delhi.

https://www.timesnownews.com/india/...-vernon-gonzalves-arun-ferreira-maoist/277248
 

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'India, China in talks to revamp 12-yr-old defence MoU; set up hotline between defence ministries'
India and China are in talks to update a 12-year-old defence agreement and establish a hotline between the two defence ministries as part of confidence building measures, a top PLA official said today.

During Chinese Defence Minister General Wei Fenghe's meeting with Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his Indian counterpart Nirmala Sitharaman in New Delhi last week, the two sides had in-depth discussions on how to further implement the important consensus reached between Modi and Chinese President Xi Jinping, Defence Ministry spokesman Colonel Wu Qian said.

https://economictimes.indiatimes.co...m_medium=HPTN&utm_campaign=AL1&utm_content=23
 

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Chanakya In Our Times


Published: September 1, 2018 12:07:51 am
Prime Minister Narendra Modi with Pakistan President Mamnoon Hussain and China’s Xi Jinping at the signing ceremony of Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) in Qingdao, China. (Reuters Photo)

Pakistan’s last Field Marshal Ayub Khan’s posthumous book, Diaries of Field Marshal Mohammad Ayub Khan 1966-1972, had a significant entry: “Chanakya the Indian philosopher was also called Kautilya which means liar”. Khan’s moral judgment was not unlike early European reactions to Machiavelli who taught the princes of Europe how to rule their city-states. Pakistan should today read Machiavelli’s observations on the flaws of living inside a castle.

In From Chanakya to Modi: Evolution of India’s Foreign Policy (2017), Aparna Pande tries to explain India’s foreign policy in light of theories of the great Chanakya. According to Pande, India has alternated between two schools of thought, the Arthasastrins and the Dharmasastrins. The first recommends “artifice, infiltration, subversion, propaganda and economic pressure,” instead of war; the second advocates “heroic war for just ends, win or die”. Needless to say, the second sounds like the jihad doctrine of a revisionist Pakistan next door. But Kautilya had his famous Raj Mandala doctrine:

“In Kautilya’s concentric circles, your immediate neighbour is your natural enemy as he covets your territory and resources and is positioned to take them if he is more powerful than you. The neighbour’s neighbour, however, is your friend because he can covet your neighbour’s territory but cannot invade you until he becomes your neighbour. This identification of friends and potential rivals proceeds outward in mandalas or circles.”

Pande has described the development of foreign policy thinking in India in the light of the doctrines of isolationism and involvement. But, according to her, the two ways of thinking were not sealed from each other in the Indian mind. Chanakya’s Arthashastra casts its influence on Indian leaders from Jawaharlal Nehru to Narendra Modi.

The “cunning” implied in the doctrine is for the neighbours to deal with; in the Indian mind, it is relied on for avoidance of war. This difference of perceptions will continue to haunt South Asia that would see India’s pursuit of Raj Mandala as an evil double-faced approach. India’s well-known inability to reach quick bilateral decisions is also misinterpreted in the neighbourhood as well on the world stage. However, Pakistan has its own “doctrinal” difficulties with pragmatism and “flexibility of response” when dealing with India. Nobody in Islamabad has been able to decipher the statesman like Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee’s visit to Lahore in 1999. The unstudied consequence of that visit was the “conversion” of the then Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, who rests unrepentant in prison today.

It is under Prime Minister Modi, however, that Raj Mandala has come into its own. He has hopped over “neighbour” Pakistan to invest in Afghanistan and Iran, tied up with a scared UAE and embraced a grateful Saudi Arabia while getting his most crucial high-tech imports from Israel.


Pakistan is fated to confront the Chanakyan approach to avoiding war. It lacks any cultural nexus with China. Pakistan therefore cannot understand its “all-weather” friend encircling India as if following the wisdom of Chanakya while at the same time doing big-time trade with India. While Islamabad agonises over Beijing’s advice to include India in the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor, it misses the signal from its all-weather friend.


Chanakya looks down and smiles.

https://indianexpress.com/article/o...a-machiavelli-ayub-khan-in-our-times-5334493/
 

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India, Kazakhstan militaries to train together

Indian and Kazakhstan armies are set to train together in a two-week military drill near a Otar military base in the southeast of the Central Asian country from next week.

The joint army exercise 'Kazind' will be conducted between the Indian and Kazakhstan Army from September 10 to 23 in Otar.


This is the third joint military exercise between the two countries "which have a history of extensive cooperation in the defence arena", an army spokesperson said. The second edition of the exercise was held in India last year.

https://www.business-standard.com/a...itaries-to-train-together-118090400929_1.html
 

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India backs Mauritius’ claim over UK-ruled Chagos Islands

Highlights
  • Of the 22 countries which are giving their legal opinion at ICJ, the UK is supported by the US, Australia and Israel, while Mauritius is being supported by 17 countries, including India
  • Historical survey of facts indicates that the Chagos Archipelago throughout the pre- and post-colonial era has been part of the Mauritian territory: India
India weighed in on behalf of Mauritius at the International Court of Justice (ICJ), The Hague, saying the Chagos archipelago in the Indian Ocean – which is currently ruled by the UK and operates US’ Diego Garcia military base – “has been and continues to be with Mauritius.”

After the UN General Assembly voted overwhelmingly in favour of a legal opinion to the question of sovereignty of the islands, the ICJ has taken up the case to deliver an advisory opinion, which will not be legally binding. Of the 22 countries which are giving their legal opinion, the UK is supported by the US, Australia and Israel, while Mauritius is being supported by 17 countries, including India.

India’s ambassador, Venu Rajamony, who presented the Indian opinion, said "the historical survey of facts … indicates that the Chagos Archipelago throughout the pre- and post-colonial era has been part of the Mauritian territory. These islands came under the colonial administration of the United Kingdom as part of Mauritian territory.”

While India stayed true to its commitment to its Indian Ocean neighbour Mauritius, as well as its anti-colonial credentials, there is some irony in the fact that after signing the LEMOA with the US in 2016, India can actually access Diego Garcia for some of its uses. That itself has led to some interest in India’s opinion, particularly as the UK and US have reached out to India for support. The Indian opinion was also made the day before the first high-level dialogue between India and US here tomorrow.

A statement by the Indian government observed, “The Arbitral Tribunal constituted by agreement between Mauritius and UK in its Award dated 18 March 2015, ruled that the undertakings of the United Kingdom with respect to the fishing rights of Mauritius in the waters of Chagos Archipelago; the eventual return of the Archipelago to Mauritius and; the benefit of mineral and oil resources in and near the Archipelago, are legally binding undertakings. Further, by declaring as legally binding the undertaking of the United Kingdom to return the Archipelago to Mauritius, the Award has determined the legal obligation of the United Kingdom to return the Archipelago to Mauritius.”

Once the Chagos was unilaterally annexed by the UK in 1968, the Islanders were evicted in groups from their homes. Many of them ended up in the UK and filed cases against the British government demanding the right to return.



https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com...ort-mauritius-at-icj/articleshow/65689630.cms
 

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President invites Bulgaria to become India's key partner in defence sector

India and Bulgaria on Wednesday signed four MoUs, including one on civil nuclear cooperation, as President Ram Nath Kovind held talks with his Bulgarian counterpart Rumen Radev and invited the Balkan nation to become a key partner of India in the defence sector.

Kovind arrived here on Tuesday from Cyprus on the second leg of his eight-day three-nation visit to Europe to continue India's high-level engagements with European countries.

The President held detailed talks with Radev and later the two leaders witnessed witnessed signing of four MoUs between India and Bulgaria on investment, tourism, civil nuclear cooperation and the establishment of Hindi Chair at Sofia University, Ministry of External Affairs spokesperson Raveesh Kumar tweeted.


A programme of cooperation was also signed to enhance scientific cooperation, he said


Kovind also invited Bulgaria to become a key partner of India in defence sector, IT sector under 'Make In India' programme, the MEA spokesperson said.

Bulgaria is a North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO) member country with a large indigenous defence industry. It is ranked as a "medium" small arms exporter according to the Small Arms Survey.

Bilateral trade between India and Bulgaria has grown 76 percent during 2016-17, but there is a lot of scope for expanding the current bilateral trade basket as well as for enhancing the quantum in the existing items of export and import, the Indian Embassy in Bulgaria said on its website.

Last night, Kovind hailed the Indian diaspora in Bulgaria for acting as a "living bridge" between the two nations and welcomed the community's participation in India's transformative journey.

Addressing the Indian Community here, the president also said there is a "new vigour" in India's diaspora policy and outreach.

Praising the Indian community, Kovind said, "The Indian Diaspora in Bulgaria constitutes a living bridge between our countries. Your numbers may be small but you have made appreciable contribution to fostering bilateral ties."

The Indian community in Bulgaria is very small numbering around 250 permanent residents who are engaged in small business or work in companies.

In addition, there are around 400 other Indians, mostly students and IT professionals, who come on temporary basis and leave the country when their courses or job assignments are over.

https://www.moneycontrol.com/news/i...as-key-partner-in-defence-sector-2920181.html
 

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why are we acting like headless chicken and brainless pig ..If we evict UK from this island china will simply come and sit there within months by bribing the Mauritius govt and we are so pathetic in foreign policy we cant even do anything in Maldives now we want to influence Mauritius which will simply run into china hands once US influence in the islands end ..:doh:

India backs Mauritius’ claim over UK-ruled Chagos Islands

Highlights
  • Of the 22 countries which are giving their legal opinion at ICJ, the UK is supported by the US, Australia and Israel, while Mauritius is being supported by 17 countries, including India
  • Historical survey of facts indicates that the Chagos Archipelago throughout the pre- and post-colonial era has been part of the Mauritian territory: India
India weighed in on behalf of Mauritius at the International Court of Justice (ICJ), The Hague, saying the Chagos archipelago in the Indian Ocean – which is currently ruled by the UK and operates US’ Diego Garcia military base – “has been and continues to be with Mauritius.”

After the UN General Assembly voted overwhelmingly in favour of a legal opinion to the question of sovereignty of the islands, the ICJ has taken up the case to deliver an advisory opinion, which will not be legally binding. Of the 22 countries which are giving their legal opinion, the UK is supported by the US, Australia and Israel, while Mauritius is being supported by 17 countries, including India.

India’s ambassador, Venu Rajamony, who presented the Indian opinion, said "the historical survey of facts … indicates that the Chagos Archipelago throughout the pre- and post-colonial era has been part of the Mauritian territory. These islands came under the colonial administration of the United Kingdom as part of Mauritian territory.”

While India stayed true to its commitment to its Indian Ocean neighbour Mauritius, as well as its anti-colonial credentials, there is some irony in the fact that after signing the LEMOA with the US in 2016, India can actually access Diego Garcia for some of its uses. That itself has led to some interest in India’s opinion, particularly as the UK and US have reached out to India for support. The Indian opinion was also made the day before the first high-level dialogue between India and US here tomorrow.

A statement by the Indian government observed, “The Arbitral Tribunal constituted by agreement between Mauritius and UK in its Award dated 18 March 2015, ruled that the undertakings of the United Kingdom with respect to the fishing rights of Mauritius in the waters of Chagos Archipelago; the eventual return of the Archipelago to Mauritius and; the benefit of mineral and oil resources in and near the Archipelago, are legally binding undertakings. Further, by declaring as legally binding the undertaking of the United Kingdom to return the Archipelago to Mauritius, the Award has determined the legal obligation of the United Kingdom to return the Archipelago to Mauritius.”

Once the Chagos was unilaterally annexed by the UK in 1968, the Islanders were evicted in groups from their homes. Many of them ended up in the UK and filed cases against the British government demanding the right to return.



https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com...ort-mauritius-at-icj/articleshow/65689630.cms
 

sorcerer

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why are we acting like headless chicken and brainless pig ..If we evict UK from this island china will simply come and sit there within months by bribing the Mauritius govt and we are so pathetic in foreign policy we cant even do anything in Maldives now we want to influence Mauritius which will simply run into china hands once US influence in the islands end ..:doh:
India doesnt want to be headless chicken nor a brainless pig. Looks like India has weighed its options well here.

Once the Chagos was unilaterally annexed by the UK in 1968, the Islanders were evicted in groups from their homes. Many of them ended up in the UK and filed cases against the British government demanding the right to return.
What If
UK loses the case despite backing and Mauritius will turn against INDIA cuz we OPENLY challenged their integrity. china will be there on the double. [I think china supports Mauritius claim too. Its the sensible thing for India to do such.]

if Mauritius wins with the backing of India, India can play its cards, there is something to gain
If UK wins, its all back to normal, there is nothing to gain. its UK and USA.

India balanced its options well with Mauritius.

Also in South Asia, UK has been against India on the kashmir issue , supporting pakistan, even funding them against India despite all HISTORICAL PROOFS..and you wanted India to support UK on a DISPUTED LAND against the wishes of the local Mauritians.
:D


“India maintained its support for the claim of Mauritian sovereignty over the Chagos Archipelago, including Diego Garcia, and called for its early return to Mauritius,” said the ministry’s 1984-85 annual report.

With the weight of history, it was difficult to suddenly take a contrary Indian position on Chagos despite concerns of Chinese presence, South Block finally decided.


Incidentally, as per diplomatic sources, India had advised Mauritius to renew the offer to the US to lease Diego Garcia as a military base even if sovereignty was returned.

https://thewire.in/diplomacy/india-backs-mauritiuss-sovereignty-claim-over-chagos-islands-at-icj

Well!!! We are putting our weight behind the HISTORY on Kashmir Issue .Its doing the RIGHT thing and is the viable option, better than taking a shitty gamble.
 

sorcerer

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India’s Island Diplomacy: Building an Indian Ocean Security Architecture

India has charted the path of becoming an “influential” and “responsible” leader in the Indian Ocean region.


With global power dynamics shifting from West to East, regional powers, namely China and India, have shifted focus to an ocean-based approach in determining geostrategies and foreign relations. The Indian Ocean, which facilitates a significant share of world trade and serves as an economic lifeline for over 2 billion people, has become a geopolitical hotbed. The Straits of Malacca in the east and Hormuz in the west are some of the most strategic choke points in this region, which hosts 64 percent of the world’s oil trade and movement of half of the world’s carrier ships. The availability of 40 percent of the world’s offshore petroleum, mineral deposits, and extremely diverse marine ecosystem, further makes the Indian Ocean region (IOR) important for economic and geopolitical interests.

Major littoral nations like China, India, Australia, France, as well as the countries of Southeast Asia and Africa ensure their strategic interests in the region through their own island territories or through engaging with smaller island nations.

There are two major reasons that explain the increasing significance of Indian Ocean islands: their location, which makes them vital for establishing a regional naval presence, and their proximity to sea lines of communications (SLOCs), which facilitates patrolling in the region during times of peace and conflict. The presence of these major powers in the form of naval establishments, trade, and infrastructure development aid to the smaller island nations, legitimizes their role as a security provider, thereby also allowing greater influence in the Indian Ocean region.


The challenges facing maritime security in the Indian Ocean region, however, have significantly broadened. Traditional threats include the military presence of belligerent powers and the consequent strategic rivalry, as well as terrorism, piracy, and illegal smuggling; non-traditional threats include the challenges of climate change, such as increasing natural disasters and loss of traditional livelihoods. These disruptions severely impact the island nations in this part of the world. A close partnership between these island nations and larger littoral countries thus becomes a practical necessity and plays a critical role in maintaining stability in the region.

A strong governance and security architecture in the Indian Ocean is necessary and ought to be a global priority. New Delhi’s Indian Ocean policy, enshrined in “SAGAR – Security and Growth for All in the Region,” articulates India’s vision for building a secured regional architecture, which includes “safeguarding mainland and islands, strengthening capacities of maritime neighbors and advancing peace and security” in the Indian Ocean Region.

For a country like India, the island nations of the Indian Ocean hold immense strategic value in shaping the geopolitical contours of the region and ensuring maritime security and order. The Indian islands of Andaman and Nicobar, as well as Lakshadweep, have significantly helped the country in enhancing its maritime capabilities. The Andaman and Nicobar Islands are positioned close to the Strait of Malacca and are less than 90 nautical miles from Aceh in Indonesia. This enables India to closely observe military and economic activities in and around the Strait of Malacca and also overlook the maritime entry point of western Pacific countries in the Indian Ocean. To its west, India enjoys rights over nearly 400,000 square kilometers of exclusive economic zone (EEZ) due to the Lakshadweep islands.

Farther west from India, the islands of Socotra (Yemen), Madagascar, Mauritius, and the Seychelles have gained strategic importance, standing at the crossroads of Europe, Africa, and South Asia.

While Socotra is strategically located at the opening of Gulf of Aden, which connects the Suez Canal with Indian Ocean, the maritime zones of Madagascar, Mauritius, the Maldives, and Seychelles span over 1 million sq km, which allows them greater rights in ocean waters. Indian President Ram Nath Kovind’s visit to Madagascar in March 2018, the first ever by an Indian president, symbolized the increasing importance of African island nations in India’s ocean diplomacy and their role as a key stakeholder in building a secured regional architecture. However, it is with the island nations of Mauritius and the Seychelles that India primarily seeks to bolster its economic and strategic relations in order to influence the dynamics in Indian Ocean.

Mauritius’ proximity to some of the most important SLOCs (including the Cape route connecting Europe to Asia) and to West Asian oil fields has enhanced its commercial and strategic significance. As part of its efforts to further its relations with Mauritius, India transferred a patrol vessel to strengthen the island nation’s coast guard capacities.

For better sea and air connectivity, Indian assistance will be provided for infrastructure development of Agalega Island that will inherently increase the defense capabilities of the island state and will also safeguard Indian interests in the region. Furthermore, Mauritius accounts for a majority of FDI inflow to India, with over 50 percent of the country’s population being of Indian origin. Development assistance to Mauritius, also called as “Little India,” as well as joint mechanisms to ensure a stable Indian Ocean region, thus, are mutually beneficial to both countries.

Another island nation with which India has established diplomatic relations in the recent past is the Seychelles. The country holds the rights to a 1.3 million sq km EEZ, thus making this small island nation extremely important for commercial and strategic reasons. By offering $100 million in credit, the Dornier maritime patrol aircraft, along with assistance for strengthening the Seychellois coast guard in the Assumption Islands, India has marked its presence in the western and central Indian Ocean region and expanded the scope of its maritime surveillance.

The close proximity between Assumption Island and the Mozambique channel, which facilitates major movement of merchant ships, further highlights the importance the Seychelles holds in New Delhi’s strategic calculations. Relations with the Seychelles have not just been confined to naval diplomacy; people-to-people relations have been a strong focus. The Twinning Agreement, connecting cities of Panjim in India’s Goa state and Victoria in the Seychelles, as well as relaxing visa norms and inviting Seychellois for the ITEC program are some concerted efforts to build an environment of peace and shared prosperity.

Even as bilateral relations between India and the island nations strengthen, the sheer vastness and diversity of the Indian Ocean region necessitates India to engage in multilateral cooperation through institutional mechanisms. The Indian Navy has provided hydrographic assistance to the islands of Mauritius, Maldives, and the Seychelles for mapping ocean waters to ensure maritime security. India has also played a leading role spearheading the Indian Ocean Naval Symposium (IONS), which aims at strengthening maritime security through naval cooperation of its 35 members, and the Indian Ocean Rim Association (IORA), involving 21 members to work toward security, governance, promotion of blue economy, and cultural tourism. The membership of Comoros, the Seychelles, Mauritius, and Madagascar to these intergovernmental forums is indicative of India’s efforts to promote stability and prosperity by involving all stakeholders irrespective of their economic and naval capacities.

Resonating with the words of Alfred Mahan that “whoever attains control of the Indian Ocean, will dominate Asia,” India has charted the path of becoming an “influential” and “responsible” leader in the Indian Ocean region. As New Delhi ambitiously moves toward this end, it must ensure that island nations, owing to their centrality in shaping power dynamics in the Indian Ocean region, gain prominence in India’s ocean diplomacy.

Arunima Gupta is manager of foreign relations, at Vision India Foundation, New Delhi.



https://thediplomat.com/2018/08/ind...ilding-an-indian-ocean-security-architecture/
 

sorcerer

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President Kovind invites Czech defence cos to manufacture in India


Says India’s growth story, Czech Republic’s technology and manufacturing prowess makes the countries ‘natural partners’
Prague, Sept 8

President Ram Nath Kovind on Friday invited Czech Republic's defence companies to invest and manufacture in India, noting that defence was a vital area of cooperation between the two countries.

Addressing the Czech-Indian Business Forum at Prague during his ongoing State visit to Czech Republic, Kovind said that the requirements of India's defence sector, which was opened to private sector recently, were huge.

Eyeing partnerships
Stating that the Indian economy was dynamic and strong, Kovind urged Czech enterprises to explore, initiate and expand their footprint in India.

Indian companies are also keen to establish new business tie-ups and locate themselves in Czech Republic, he added.

“I invite you to partner us in India’s exciting and transformative journey, which is going to usher in a new era to not only India and Czech Republic, but to the entire world,” he said.

He also encouraged existing Czech companies who had invested in India to remain invested in India.

Kovind said that India’s growth story and Czech Republic's technology and manufacturing prowess made the two countries “natural partners”. He highlighted that Indian economy grew 8.2 per cent in the first quarter this fiscal and that India was the fastest growing large economy in the world. India was now the 6th largest economy in the world and poised to become a $5 trillion economy by 2025, he added.

From Bata to Skoda, the story of India-Czech partnership has been defined by popular embrace, sustainable practices and high business confidence.

We encourage Czech enterprises to remain invested in the Indian growth story #PresidentKovind

— President of India (@rashtrapatibhvn) September 7, 2018
‘Step up efforts on bilateral trade’
Kovind said that bilateral trade at $1.07 billion did not reflect the true potential for economic cooperation between the two countries and there was a need to “redouble our efforts” on this front in the coming days.

He expressed hope that the 11th Joint Economic Commission meeting — to be co-chaired by Commerce and Industry Minister Suresh Prabhu — next month at Prague would throw up new ideas to boost bilateral trade and diversify economic linkages.

Areas of cooperation
Czech Republic's Trade and Industry Minister Marta Novakova said that Czech is committed to strengthening economic cooperation with India. India ranks among Czech Republic's 10 most important non-European business partners, she added.

She said that opportunities of economic cooperation between the two countries are not fully capitalised. “There are large scale areas like energy where more cooperation could be achieved. Besides thermal and hydro, we see possibilities for nuclear energy in India,” Novakova said.

She also said that Czech companies were willing to cooperate in infrastructure and were already working in India in areas like water management.

Novakova also said that the project of creation of Czech industrial cluster in Bengaluru will come up for discussion at the Joint Economic Commission meeting.

Four MoUs signed
Kovind is accompanied by a 50-member strong business delegation from India. The delegation includes members of industry chambers Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry, the Confederation of Indian Industry, Assocham, PHDCCI and Trade Promotion Council of India.

On Friday, there was a B2B meeting between the business representatives of two sides, leading to signing of four memorandum of understanding in industry and education sectors.

https://www.thehindubusinessline.co...s-to-manufacture-in-india/article24900439.ece
 

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Chanakya In Our Times


Published: September 1, 2018 12:07:51 am
Prime Minister Narendra Modi with Pakistan President Mamnoon Hussain and China’s Xi Jinping at the signing ceremony of Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) in Qingdao, China. (Reuters Photo)

Pakistan’s last Field Marshal Ayub Khan’s posthumous book, Diaries of Field Marshal Mohammad Ayub Khan 1966-1972, had a significant entry: “Chanakya the Indian philosopher was also called Kautilya which means liar”. Khan’s moral judgment was not unlike early European reactions to Machiavelli who taught the princes of Europe how to rule their city-states. Pakistan should today read Machiavelli’s observations on the flaws of living inside a castle.

In From Chanakya to Modi: Evolution of India’s Foreign Policy (2017), Aparna Pande tries to explain India’s foreign policy in light of theories of the great Chanakya. According to Pande, India has alternated between two schools of thought, the Arthasastrins and the Dharmasastrins. The first recommends “artifice, infiltration, subversion, propaganda and economic pressure,” instead of war; the second advocates “heroic war for just ends, win or die”. Needless to say, the second sounds like the jihad doctrine of a revisionist Pakistan next door. But Kautilya had his famous Raj Mandala doctrine:

“In Kautilya’s concentric circles, your immediate neighbour is your natural enemy as he covets your territory and resources and is positioned to take them if he is more powerful than you. The neighbour’s neighbour, however, is your friend because he can covet your neighbour’s territory but cannot invade you until he becomes your neighbour. This identification of friends and potential rivals proceeds outward in mandalas or circles.”

Pande has described the development of foreign policy thinking in India in the light of the doctrines of isolationism and involvement. But, according to her, the two ways of thinking were not sealed from each other in the Indian mind. Chanakya’s Arthashastra casts its influence on Indian leaders from Jawaharlal Nehru to Narendra Modi.

The “cunning” implied in the doctrine is for the neighbours to deal with; in the Indian mind, it is relied on for avoidance of war. This difference of perceptions will continue to haunt South Asia that would see India’s pursuit of Raj Mandala as an evil double-faced approach. India’s well-known inability to reach quick bilateral decisions is also misinterpreted in the neighbourhood as well on the world stage. However, Pakistan has its own “doctrinal” difficulties with pragmatism and “flexibility of response” when dealing with India. Nobody in Islamabad has been able to decipher the statesman like Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee’s visit to Lahore in 1999. The unstudied consequence of that visit was the “conversion” of the then Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, who rests unrepentant in prison today.

It is under Prime Minister Modi, however, that Raj Mandala has come into its own. He has hopped over “neighbour” Pakistan to invest in Afghanistan and Iran, tied up with a scared UAE and embraced a grateful Saudi Arabia while getting his most crucial high-tech imports from Israel.


Pakistan is fated to confront the Chanakyan approach to avoiding war. It lacks any cultural nexus with China. Pakistan therefore cannot understand its “all-weather” friend encircling India as if following the wisdom of Chanakya while at the same time doing big-time trade with India. While Islamabad agonises over Beijing’s advice to include India in the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor, it misses the signal from its all-weather friend.


Chanakya looks down and smiles.

https://indianexpress.com/article/o...a-machiavelli-ayub-khan-in-our-times-5334493/
I think that Aparna Pande has in the past collaborated on research with Hussain Haqqani.
Hussain Haqqani - the so called good Haqqani - is a "worse" Haqqani than the bad Haqqani(s). At least with the bad Haqqani(s) you know where you stand.

The Pakistaniyat of this Hussain Haqqani shows through quite often. He is probably an ISI plant, placed in order to control the discourse on the opposing side. That is why the ISI gives him additional cover by now and then declaring treason type charges again H Haqqani in Paki media.
 
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prohumanity

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Hussain Haqqani is an offshoot of CNN gang which includes likes of Farid Zakaria etc. He is westernised Paki , has very complicated mindset. Supported by and aligned with India bashing lobby in US. Got to be careful dealing with this pseudo-western intellectual.
 

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India backs Mauritius’ claim over UK-ruled Chagos Islands

Highlights
  • Of the 22 countries which are giving their legal opinion at ICJ, the UK is supported by the US, Australia and Israel, while Mauritius is being supported by 17 countries, including India
  • Historical survey of facts indicates that the Chagos Archipelago throughout the pre- and post-colonial era has been part of the Mauritian territory
The US is supporting UK as it had leased Diego Garcia, an important US military base in the Indian Ocean from the UK. The lease was renewed in 2016 for another 20 years. Losing domination of a vast segment of the IOR by giving up Diego Garcia is not in US security interests.

However we are in a Catch 22 situation. There is a clear understanding that the presence of the US in the Indian Ocean is critical at this juncture keeping in mind the growing influence of China and its penetration into the Indian Ocean Region which poses a security threat to India. Mauritius could go the way as Maldives which has already sold itself to China adding another 'pearl' to the string.




By Globe-trotter

I think we need to give security top priority and tacitly convince Mauritius to delay it as long as possible. After all, diplomacy is the art of the impossible!
 
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sorcerer

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I think we need to give security top priority and tacitly convince Mauritius to delay it as long as possible. After all, diplomacy is the art of the impossible!
IMO, the case has been given against UK by the Mauritians living in UK.
Most probably, than getting the island back, they will be looking at settlement, a huge amount for all those evicted forcefully.

UK and US will be willing for it as they dont want to be evicted of such a strategic location in the IOR.
Plus,
there could be chinese meddling in this affair to keep USA and its allies out of IOR.
Anyway its a win win for Mauritius and Mauritians pitching the claim.

:popcorn:
 

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