India, France to talk eurozone crisis, Af-Pak, nuclear deal

ejazr

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India, France to talk eurozone crisis, Af-Pak, nuclear deal - The Economic Times

NEW DELHI: FrenchForeign minister Alain Juppe, who is arriving here on a three-day visit on Thursday, will hold a wide-ranging discussion with his Indian counterpart SM Krishna.

India is most likely to urge France, the host of the forthcoming G-20 summit, to help evolve a credible recovery plan to combat the eurozone crisis. The two sides will also discuss a swathe of other issues, including the Afghanistan-Pakistan situation and bilateral civil nuclear cooperation.

Juppe is also likely to meet Home Minister P Chidambaram. He will also call on Prime Minister Manmohan Singh to invite him formally for the G-20 summit of emerging and developed economies that France will host in Cannes early next month. In the delegation-level talks, Krishna and Juppe will focus on the financial crisis in the eurozone and developed economies, including the US.

Speaking at the 5th IBSA summit in Pretoria, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh on Tuesday had said the debt crisis in Europe and the financial slowdown in the developed world were sending negative signals to the world's financial markets and affecting development prospects of developing countries. Krishna is likely to voice India's concerns over the eurozone crisis and urge France, Europe's second largest economy, to take the lead in evolving a credible recovery plan. New Delhi is also expected to press for a greater voice for developing countries in international financial institutions that have become the fiefdom of developed countries over the years, said wellplaced sources.

Also on the table will be a cluster of regional and global issues, including terror emanating from the Afghanistan-Pakistan region, the Syria crisis, climate change and the UN reforms. Enhancing counter-terror cooperation will figure prominently in the talks. India is expected to tell France about the recent strategic partnership pact with Afghanistan and share concerns about safe havens of terrorists and extremists like the Haqqani network that continue to operate with impunity in the region, said the sources.

Juppe will outline France's vision of its strategic partnership with India at a lecture on Friday. The talks are also expected to give an impetus to bilateral civil nuclear cooperation between France and India. Paris is likely to seek renewed assurance from New Delhi about its civil nuclear liability regime, seen as onerous by many countries.

Juppe's visit comes amid growing concerns in India over nuclear safety and protests against the Russia-built Kudankulam nuclear plant. He is expected to assure New Delhi about stringent safety standards followed by French nuclear giants like Areva which is in the middle of discussions to build two 1,650 MW reactors in Jaitapur in western India.

Unfazed by the Fukushima nuclear radiation leak, France, a leader in civilian nuclear technology, is in the middle of negotiating nuclear deals with a host of European countries and emerging economies.

France was the first country to sign a bilateral civil nuclear accord with India September 2008 after the Nuclear Suppliers Group amended global rules of nuclear commerce in India's favour.
 

Teko Jim

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Relations between India and Pakistan have been strained by a number of historical and political issues, and are defined by the violent partition of British Indiahttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Partition_of_India in 1947, the Kashmir disputehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kashmir_dispute and the numerous military conflictshttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indo-Pakistani_wars fought between the two nations. Consequently, even though the two South Asianhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/South_Asia nations share historic, cultural, geographic, and economic links, their relationship has been plagued by hostility and suspicion.
 

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