Mr Modi described India and Africa as the 'two
bright spots of hope in the global economy' AP
|
Indian
Prime Minister Narendra Modi has announced US$600m (£393m) in assistance for
development projects in Africa at a major summit in Delhi. More
than 50 African leaders are attending the India-Africa Forum Summit,
unprecedented in scale, in the Indian capital.
Although India's trade with Africa has more than
doubled to US$72bn since 2007, it is still comparatively small.
The meeting is being seen as an attempt by India to
improve ties with Africa.
A record number of African leaders, including South
Africa's Jacob Zuma, Zimbabwe's Robert Mugabe, President Sisi of Egypt and
Sudan's Omar al-Bashir are attending the summit - part of India's big push to
increase its presence in Africa.
BBC News report continues:
'Bright
spots'
Reports say the summit represents the highest
number of foreign dignitaries to descend on India since 1983 and is thought to
be the biggest ever overseas gathering of African leaders.
Welcoming them, Mr Modi described India and Africa
as the "two bright spots of hope in the global economy".
"The hearts of 1.25 billion Indians and 1.25
billion Africans are in rhythm. We are united by youth - two thirds of India
and Africa are below 35. And, if the future belongs to the youth, then this
century is ours to shape and build," Mr Modi said.
The meeting is being seen as an attempt by India to
improve its ties to Africa AFP
|
The BBC's Sanjoy Majumder in Delhi says India is
using its historic ties with the continent, where a large number of Indians
migrated during colonial times, to strengthen its economic links.
India is interested in Africa's natural resource
while African countries want to benefit from Indian expertise in high-tech
sectors such as IT and mobile phones.
Much of central Delhi has been shut down as the
African leaders are being ferried across town in limousines and on Wednesday
night, they turned out wearing colourful Indian turbans and jackets at an
official dinner.
The first ladies, in the meantime, are being taken sightseeing and given
Indian cooking lessons as India pulls out the stops to make the summit a grand
success, our correspondent says.
No comments:
Post a Comment