|
European Union, India sign Strategic
Partnership Pact
Pakistan
Times
Monitoring Desk
THE HAGUE (Netherlands):
The European Union signed a 'strategic partnership' with India on Monday
aimed at tightening economic and political ties with a burgeoning economy
seen in Europe as an emerging power.
The deal strengthens European trade, investment and other economic ties with
the South Asian country. It breaks new ground by opening the door to
increased cooperation in political areas, such as non-proliferation of
dangerous arms, the fight against terrorism, ways to promote stability on
the Asian subcontinent and United Nations reforms.
The Accord
The accord was signed by Dutch Prime Minister Jan Peter Balkenende, whose
country holds the EU's rotating presidency, and Indian Prime Minister
Manmohan Singh.
The two sides also signed an accord worth $33 million (US$43 million) for
European scholarships for 1,000 Indian students a year over the next three
years.
Of the Plights
On the eve of the meeting, human rights groups urged the EU to press Singh
on the plight of the Dalits, India's 'untouchables,' who are widely
oppressed and exploited.
The EU rivals the United States as India's leading trade partner, accounting
for 23 percent of the country's exports in 2002.
Two-way trade between India and the EU nearly tripled to $27 billion (US$33
billion) from 1992 to 2002, according to EU figures.
Perspective
India's economy has long trailed behind those of its East Asian neighbors,
but is expected to surge in the next 20 years. Outsourcing of European and
American jobs has been a boon for India, and the country's pharmaceutical,
telecommunications and auto industries are booming.
It plans to use the partnership agreement to develop political discussions
about peace and stability, conflict prevention, the fight against terrorism,
human rights as well as organized crime and migration issues.●
|