Close X
Saturday, November 30, 2024
ADVT 
India

Indo-Japanese Ties Will Bring Peace In Asia, World: Abe

Darpan News Desk IANS, 11 Dec, 2015 11:13 AM
    The India-Japan strategic relationship can contribute to peace and prosperity in Asia and the world, said Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe who arrived here on Friday on a three-day official visit expected to see progress towards India's first bullet train and a civil nuclear deal.
     
    "Indo-Japanese relations will contribute to peace and prosperity in Asia and the world," Abe, while addressing the Japan-India Innovation Seminar ahead of his annual meeting with his Indian counterpart Narendra Modi on Saturday. 
     
    "India and Japan should sow more seeds of innovation and make them bloom.
     
    "Japan values scientific and technical cooperation with India, a culture that has discovered the 'zero' and with such a fine tradition in mathematics," he said.
     
    Citing examples of Indo-Japanese technical collaboration for environment-friendly development, he said the Metro rail network started in Delhi with Japan's collaboration, and was rapidly expanding to other centres in India.
     
    "If the 'Shinkansen' (Japan's bullet train) starts flying in India, distances will get smaller," he said.
     
    "Come invest in Japan," he told the conference participants in English, pointing out that in the last three years of his government, unemployment was the lowest in two decades, while wage hikes last year were the highest in 17 years.
     
    However, with an "aging population" in Japan, if the population decreased, it would be difficult to keep up the growth momentum, he added.
     
    Earlier, Indian External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj called on Abe soon after his arrival.
     
    "Carrying forward a positive legacy of friendship and cooperation. EAM @SushmaSwaraj calls on Japense PM @Abe Shinzo," tweeted external affairs ministry spokesman Vikas Swarup.
     
    Abe's visit comes amid expectations that an agreement would be firmed up on India's first bullet train to run between Mumbai and Ahmedabad and headway made in the talks on a civil nuclear deal.
     
    Abe was received at the airport by Minister of State for Finance Jayant Sinha.
     
    He will hold the annual summit meeting with Modi on Saturday, following which the two leaders will issue press statements. Abe will also call on President Pranab Mukherjee.
     
    Another highlight is a trip with his counterpart to Varanasi, Modi's parliamentary constituency, on Saturday where he will attend the Ganga Aarti at Dashashwamedh Ghat. 
     
    At the last summit meeting held in Tokyo in 2014, the two prime ministers agreed to elevate the bilateral relationship to "special strategic and global partnership".
     
    Modi and Abe also met last month on the sidelines of the 13th Asean-India Summit at Kuala Lumpur and again during the Paris climate change conference.
     
    Abe, who met Modi over lunch at Kuala Lumpur, had said that India-Japan relationship has the greatest potential of any bilateral relationship in the world.
     
    The proposed bullet train line between Mumbai and Ahmedabad would cost Rs.98,000 crore, according to a joint project feasibility study, co-financed by the Indian Railways and Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA).
     
    India sees Japan as an important player in the nuclear energy sector with major Japanese firms manufacturing components for related equipment.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Kotkapura Tense After Desecration Of 'Bir' Of Holy Guru Granth Sahib

    Kotkapura Tense After Desecration Of 'Bir' Of Holy Guru Granth Sahib
    Tension mounted in Kotkapura area on Monday after over 100 pages of the Sikh holy book were found scattered in a street near a gurdwara in Bargari village

    Kotkapura Tense After Desecration Of 'Bir' Of Holy Guru Granth Sahib

    Modi's Silence Permitting 'Thuggish Violence' In India: Salman Rushdie

    Speaking to NTDV from London, Rushdie said the rising intolerance in India posed a "real grave danger" to liberties. 

    Modi's Silence Permitting 'Thuggish Violence' In India: Salman Rushdie

    Led By Sahgal, Indian Writers Renounce Awards; Script Dissent Against Intolerance

    Led By Sahgal, Indian Writers Renounce Awards; Script Dissent Against Intolerance
    Their protest is against what they call the growing intolerance within the country and the muted response of the establishment, including the Akademi, to the series of hate crimes.

    Led By Sahgal, Indian Writers Renounce Awards; Script Dissent Against Intolerance

    Novelist Dalip Kaur Tiwana Returns Padma Shri Award Over 'Communal Attacks'

    Novelist Dalip Kaur Tiwana Returns Padma Shri Award Over 'Communal Attacks'
    Patiala-based Tiwana, a noted novelist and short-story writer, said that she was returning the honour conferred on her to highlight the wrong things being done in the country.

    Novelist Dalip Kaur Tiwana Returns Padma Shri Award Over 'Communal Attacks'

    Surjit Patar And Three Other Punjabi Litterateurs Announce Return Of Sahitya Akademi Award

    Surjit Patar And Three Other Punjabi Litterateurs Announce Return Of Sahitya Akademi Award
    Besides Patar, the other three poets and writers who announced that they would return their awards were Jaswinder Singh, Baldev Singh Sadaknama and Darshan Bhuttar.

    Surjit Patar And Three Other Punjabi Litterateurs Announce Return Of Sahitya Akademi Award

    Punjab Farmers To Continue Stir As Talks With Chief Minister Badal Fail

    Punjab Farmers To Continue Stir As Talks With Chief Minister Badal Fail
    Sources said that Punjab government refused to accept the demand of farmers for considerable enhancement in compensation for losses due to whitefly pest attack on cotton crop.

    Punjab Farmers To Continue Stir As Talks With Chief Minister Badal Fail