Tag: Jaishankar

  • Amid Parliament logjam, govt passes crucial bills

    Express News Service

    NEW DELHI/GUWAHATI: A day after moving a no-confidence motion in the Lok Sabha against the Narendra Modi government, Opposition parties on Thursday stepped up their protest in Parliament over the Manipur violence, creating a ruckus in the Lok Sabha and disrupting External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar’s speech in the Rajya Sabha. 

    Although the Lok Sabha witnessed chaos, the Treasury Bench managed to pass two important bills — the Jan Vishwas (Amendment of Provisions) Bill, which seeks to improve the ease of doing business, and the Repealing and Amending Bill aimed at repealing 65 obsolete laws. The Rajya Sabha passed the Cinematograph (Amendment) Bill, 2023. 

    Congress Chief Whip in the Lok Sabha Kodikunnil Suresh alleged the government passed the bills without discussion. The Upper House witnessed a heated exchange between Leader of the House Piyush Goyal and Leader of Opposition Mallikarjun Kharge after Opposition members disrupted Jaishankar’s statement on the country’s achievements on the foreign policy front. 

    Taking a dig at the Opposition members for wearing black dress, Goyal said it reflected their political future. “Your past, present and future is black,” Goyal said to the chagrin of Opposition members. Later, the opposition parties said they would send a 20-member delegation of MPs to Manipur on July 28 and 29 to assess the situation in the state. On Thursday, one person was killed and three others were injured in a fierce gunfight between two groups in Manipur. 

    NEW DELHI/GUWAHATI: A day after moving a no-confidence motion in the Lok Sabha against the Narendra Modi government, Opposition parties on Thursday stepped up their protest in Parliament over the Manipur violence, creating a ruckus in the Lok Sabha and disrupting External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar’s speech in the Rajya Sabha. 

    Although the Lok Sabha witnessed chaos, the Treasury Bench managed to pass two important bills — the Jan Vishwas (Amendment of Provisions) Bill, which seeks to improve the ease of doing business, and the Repealing and Amending Bill aimed at repealing 65 obsolete laws. The Rajya Sabha passed the Cinematograph (Amendment) Bill, 2023. 

    Congress Chief Whip in the Lok Sabha Kodikunnil Suresh alleged the government passed the bills without discussion. The Upper House witnessed a heated exchange between Leader of the House Piyush Goyal and Leader of Opposition Mallikarjun Kharge after Opposition members disrupted Jaishankar’s statement on the country’s achievements on the foreign policy front. googletag.cmd.push(function() {googletag.display(‘div-gpt-ad-8052921-2’); });

    Taking a dig at the Opposition members for wearing black dress, Goyal said it reflected their political future. “Your past, present and future is black,” Goyal said to the chagrin of Opposition members. 
    Later, the opposition parties said they would send a 20-member delegation of MPs to Manipur on July 28 and 29 to assess the situation in the state. On Thursday, one person was killed and three others were injured in a fierce gunfight between two groups in Manipur. 

  • ‘We want action, not assurances’: MEA on Indian High Commission attack in London

    Express News Service

    NEW DELHI: The Ministry of External Affair (MEA) reacting to the various acts of vandalism that have been reported across Australia, Canada and the US said it is not interested in assurance and would like to see some action taken.

    “Hope governments will take action and prosecute those involved,’’ MEA spokesperson Arindam Bagchi said. 

    Many countries have a different view of their own security and different view of other people’s security. We will not accept this differential status, said External Affairs Minister, Dr S Jaishankar.

    It is the obligation of the receiving country to provide security for a diplomat to do their work, to ensure embassy or high commission’s premises are respected, said Jaishankar.

    “These obligations were not met. We had conversations with the British government on this,’’ Dr Jaishankar said in an event in Bengaluru on Friday responding to the security of Indian missions following the vandalism of Indian High Commission in London.

    Meanwhile, Members of Parliament for House of Commons, London, have condemned the vandalism.

    ALSO READ | Extra barricades outside British High Commission in Delhi removed 

    “The protest that turned into violence and vandalism was promoted on several social media platforms at least 24 hours beforehand and it is disappointing that the Home Office failed to ensure adequate protection,’’ said Navendu Mishra in a letter addressed to Indian High Commissioner in London, Vikram Doraiswami. This letter was co-signed by seven other MPs.

    Meanwhile, the British Foreign Secretary, Tom Tugendhat, too had a meeting with HC Doraiswami and spoke about security cooperation.

    UK’s leader of the House of Commons, Penny Mordaunt also condemned the vandalism.

    Delhi Police has registered a case against Indian nationals who were involved in the vandalization of the IHC in London. A report has been given to Indian authorities on the vandalism instance.

    ALSO READ | Diaspora meet counters tricolour attack at London mission with festive spirit 

    It is reported that security around Indian missions in Australia – Melbourne, Canberra, Sydney has been beefed up. This comes after Prime Minister Narendra Modi expressed concern about the growing instances of vandalism of temples across Australia when Australian PM Anthony Albanese was visiting India earlier this month.

    In the Canadian Parliament, a concern was raised about the situation in Punjab.

    “We are aware of the evolving situation in Punjab and are following it very closely and we look forward to a more stable situation,’’ said Canadian Foreign Minister, Melanie Joly.

    “We urge people living abroad not to be taken by inaccurate, motivated narrative,’’ said Bagchi in response to security situation in Punjab been taken up by foreign Parliaments.

    NEW DELHI: The Ministry of External Affair (MEA) reacting to the various acts of vandalism that have been reported across Australia, Canada and the US said it is not interested in assurance and would like to see some action taken.

    “Hope governments will take action and prosecute those involved,’’ MEA spokesperson Arindam Bagchi said. 

    Many countries have a different view of their own security and different view of other people’s security. We will not accept this differential status, said External Affairs Minister, Dr S Jaishankar.googletag.cmd.push(function() {googletag.display(‘div-gpt-ad-8052921-2’); });

    It is the obligation of the receiving country to provide security for a diplomat to do their work, to ensure embassy or high commission’s premises are respected, said Jaishankar.

    “These obligations were not met. We had conversations with the British government on this,’’ Dr Jaishankar said in an event in Bengaluru on Friday responding to the security of Indian missions following the vandalism of Indian High Commission in London.

    Meanwhile, Members of Parliament for House of Commons, London, have condemned the vandalism.

    ALSO READ | Extra barricades outside British High Commission in Delhi removed 

    “The protest that turned into violence and vandalism was promoted on several social media platforms at least 24 hours beforehand and it is disappointing that the Home Office failed to ensure adequate protection,’’ said Navendu Mishra in a letter addressed to Indian High Commissioner in London, Vikram Doraiswami. This letter was co-signed by seven other MPs.

    Meanwhile, the British Foreign Secretary, Tom Tugendhat, too had a meeting with HC Doraiswami and spoke about security cooperation.

    UK’s leader of the House of Commons, Penny Mordaunt also condemned the vandalism.

    Delhi Police has registered a case against Indian nationals who were involved in the vandalization of the IHC in London. A report has been given to Indian authorities on the vandalism instance.

    ALSO READ | Diaspora meet counters tricolour attack at London mission with festive spirit 

    It is reported that security around Indian missions in Australia – Melbourne, Canberra, Sydney has been beefed up. This comes after Prime Minister Narendra Modi expressed concern about the growing instances of vandalism of temples across Australia when Australian PM Anthony Albanese was visiting India earlier this month.

    In the Canadian Parliament, a concern was raised about the situation in Punjab.

    “We are aware of the evolving situation in Punjab and are following it very closely and we look forward to a more stable situation,’’ said Canadian Foreign Minister, Melanie Joly.

    “We urge people living abroad not to be taken by inaccurate, motivated narrative,’’ said Bagchi in response to security situation in Punjab been taken up by foreign Parliaments.

  • PM Modi govt’s China policy is ‘DDLJ-Deny, Distract, Lie and Justify’: Congress

    By PTI

    NEW DELHI: No amount of obfuscation can hide the Modi government’s failed China policy and its attempt to cover up India’s biggest territorial setback in decades, the Congress alleged on Monday, hitting out at External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar for his recent remarks on the issue.

    In a statement, senior Congress leader Jairam Ramesh also described the government’s strategy in dealing with the Chinese in Ladakh as “DDLJ- Deny, Distract, Lie and Justify” and Jaishankar’s remarks an implied cheap shot at former party chief Rahul Gandhi.

    During an event on Saturday in Pune, Jaishankar had said some people deliberately spread wrong news about the China issue.

    His remarks were viewed as a dig at Gandhi. “No amount of obfuscation can hide the fact that the (Narendra) Modi government has sought to cover up India’s biggest territorial setback in decades that followed Prime Minister Modi’s naive wooing of (Chinese) President Xi (Jinping),” Congress general secretary, communications, Ramesh said.

    “We suggest that EAM Jaishankar and the government spend more time trying to get Chinese troops out of Depsang and Demchok, and less time on blaming the opposition for their own incompetence,” he said.

    “External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar’s recent remarks attacking the Congress are simply the latest attempt to divert attention from the Modi government’s failed China policy, the most recent revelation being that since May 2020, India has lost access to 26 of 65 patrolling points in Ladakh,” he said.

    There is no comparison between 1962, when India went to war with China to defend its territory, and 2020, after which India has “acquiesced to Chinese aggression with denials followed by ‘disengagements’ in which India has lost access to thousands of square kilometres of territory”, he said.

    The Congress leader said that Minister Jaishankar’s implied cheap shot at Gandhi for meeting the Chinese ambassador in 2017 is ironic to say the least coming from someone who as ambassador to the US during the Obama administration presumably met with leading Republicans.

    “Are opposition leaders not entitled to meet diplomats from countries that are important from a trade, investment and security standpoint,” he asked.

    Rather, he said, the Modi government should have been “truthful” from the start and taken the Opposition into confidence by discussing the China issue in parliamentary standing committees and debating it in Parliament.

    He noted that at a very minimum, it should have held detailed briefings for leaders of major political parties.

    The external affairs minister, when asked at the Saturday event about some leaders of political parties lacking confidence in India while speaking about China, had said there are some people in the Opposition who have such thinking which he finds difficult to understand.

    Sometimes such people spread wrong news or information about China on purpose, Jaishankar had said without taking names.

    “If you want to ask why they have no confidence, why are they misleading people, why they spread the wrong ‘khabar’ (news) about China? How can I answer these questions? Because I know they are also doing politics.

    Sometimes they deliberately spread such news that they know is not true,” he had said while interacting with the audience in Pune in a question-answer session during the launch of ‘Bharat Marg’, the Marathi translation of his book ‘The India Way’.

    “Sometimes, they talk about some land, which was taken by China in 1962. But they will not tell you the truth. They will give you the impression that this thing happened yesterday,” the minister had said.

    Jaishankar had also said sometimes some people say there is “soch me kami” (lack of understanding) in him but in that case, he will approach the military leadership, Army, or Intelligence.

    “I will not call the Chinese ambassador and seek information,” he said referring to Gandhi’s meeting with him.

    Gandhi had last September said Prime Minister Narendra Modi has given “100 square kilometres of Indian territory” to China “without a fight,” and asked the government how it will be retrieved.

    NEW DELHI: No amount of obfuscation can hide the Modi government’s failed China policy and its attempt to cover up India’s biggest territorial setback in decades, the Congress alleged on Monday, hitting out at External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar for his recent remarks on the issue.

    In a statement, senior Congress leader Jairam Ramesh also described the government’s strategy in dealing with the Chinese in Ladakh as “DDLJ- Deny, Distract, Lie and Justify” and Jaishankar’s remarks an implied cheap shot at former party chief Rahul Gandhi.

    During an event on Saturday in Pune, Jaishankar had said some people deliberately spread wrong news about the China issue.

    His remarks were viewed as a dig at Gandhi. “No amount of obfuscation can hide the fact that the (Narendra) Modi government has sought to cover up India’s biggest territorial setback in decades that followed Prime Minister Modi’s naive wooing of (Chinese) President Xi (Jinping),” Congress general secretary, communications, Ramesh said.

    “We suggest that EAM Jaishankar and the government spend more time trying to get Chinese troops out of Depsang and Demchok, and less time on blaming the opposition for their own incompetence,” he said.

    “External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar’s recent remarks attacking the Congress are simply the latest attempt to divert attention from the Modi government’s failed China policy, the most recent revelation being that since May 2020, India has lost access to 26 of 65 patrolling points in Ladakh,” he said.

    There is no comparison between 1962, when India went to war with China to defend its territory, and 2020, after which India has “acquiesced to Chinese aggression with denials followed by ‘disengagements’ in which India has lost access to thousands of square kilometres of territory”, he said.

    The Congress leader said that Minister Jaishankar’s implied cheap shot at Gandhi for meeting the Chinese ambassador in 2017 is ironic to say the least coming from someone who as ambassador to the US during the Obama administration presumably met with leading Republicans.

    “Are opposition leaders not entitled to meet diplomats from countries that are important from a trade, investment and security standpoint,” he asked.

    Rather, he said, the Modi government should have been “truthful” from the start and taken the Opposition into confidence by discussing the China issue in parliamentary standing committees and debating it in Parliament.

    He noted that at a very minimum, it should have held detailed briefings for leaders of major political parties.

    The external affairs minister, when asked at the Saturday event about some leaders of political parties lacking confidence in India while speaking about China, had said there are some people in the Opposition who have such thinking which he finds difficult to understand.

    Sometimes such people spread wrong news or information about China on purpose, Jaishankar had said without taking names.

    “If you want to ask why they have no confidence, why are they misleading people, why they spread the wrong ‘khabar’ (news) about China? How can I answer these questions? Because I know they are also doing politics.

    Sometimes they deliberately spread such news that they know is not true,” he had said while interacting with the audience in Pune in a question-answer session during the launch of ‘Bharat Marg’, the Marathi translation of his book ‘The India Way’.

    “Sometimes, they talk about some land, which was taken by China in 1962. But they will not tell you the truth. They will give you the impression that this thing happened yesterday,” the minister had said.

    Jaishankar had also said sometimes some people say there is “soch me kami” (lack of understanding) in him but in that case, he will approach the military leadership, Army, or Intelligence.

    “I will not call the Chinese ambassador and seek information,” he said referring to Gandhi’s meeting with him.

    Gandhi had last September said Prime Minister Narendra Modi has given “100 square kilometres of Indian territory” to China “without a fight,” and asked the government how it will be retrieved.

  • Credibility of UN depends on its effective response to key challenges of our times: Jaishankar

    By PTI

    UNITED NATIONS: India strongly hit back at Pakistan on Wednesday after it raised the Kashmir issue in the UN Security Council, asserting that a country that hosted slain al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden and attacked a neighbouring Parliament does not have the credentials to ‘sermonize” in the power UN organ.

    External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar said the credibility of the UN depends on its effective response to the key challenges of our times, be it pandemics, climate change, conflicts or terrorism.

    “We are obviously focused today on the urgency of reforming multilateralism. We will naturally have our particular views, but there is a growing convergence at least that this cannot be delayed any further,” said Jaishankar, who is chairing India’s signature event on reformed multilateralism.

    “While we search for the best solutions, what our discourse must never accept is the normalisation of such threats. The question of justifying what the world regards as unacceptable should not even arise. That certainly applies to state sponsorship of cross-border terrorism. Nor can hosting Osama bin Laden and attacking a neighbouring Parliament serve as credentials to sermonize before this Council,” he said.

    Eighteen years ago on December 13, terrorists of the Pakistsan-based Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) and the Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM) attacked the Indian Parliament complex in New Delhi and opened fire, killing nine people.

    Jaishankar’s strong remarks came after Pakistan Foreign Minister Bilawal Bhutto raised the Kashmir issue while speaking in the Council debate on reformed multilateralism.

    Jaishankar arrived here Tuesday to preside over two signature events on counter-terrorism and reformed multilateralism being held under India’s current Presidency of the UN Security Council, before the curtains come down this month on the country’s two-year tenure as an elected member of the powerful 15-nation.

    India’s Permanent Representative to the UN Ambassador Ruchira Kamboj was chairing the debate when Bhutto spoke in the Council.

    Tensions between India and Pakistan have spiked since New Delhi abrogated Article 370 of the Constitution to revoke the special status of Jammu and Kashmir on August 5, 2019.

    India’s decision evoked strong reactions from Pakistan, which downgraded diplomatic ties and expelled the Indian envoy.

    India has categorically told the international community that the scrapping of Article 370 was its internal matter. It also advised Pakistan to accept the reality and stop all anti-India propaganda.

    India has told Pakistan that it desires normal neighbourly relations with Islamabad in an environment free of terror, hostility and violence.

    UNITED NATIONS: India strongly hit back at Pakistan on Wednesday after it raised the Kashmir issue in the UN Security Council, asserting that a country that hosted slain al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden and attacked a neighbouring Parliament does not have the credentials to ‘sermonize” in the power UN organ.

    External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar said the credibility of the UN depends on its effective response to the key challenges of our times, be it pandemics, climate change, conflicts or terrorism.

    “We are obviously focused today on the urgency of reforming multilateralism. We will naturally have our particular views, but there is a growing convergence at least that this cannot be delayed any further,” said Jaishankar, who is chairing India’s signature event on reformed multilateralism.

    “While we search for the best solutions, what our discourse must never accept is the normalisation of such threats. The question of justifying what the world regards as unacceptable should not even arise. That certainly applies to state sponsorship of cross-border terrorism. Nor can hosting Osama bin Laden and attacking a neighbouring Parliament serve as credentials to sermonize before this Council,” he said.

    Eighteen years ago on December 13, terrorists of the Pakistsan-based Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) and the Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM) attacked the Indian Parliament complex in New Delhi and opened fire, killing nine people.

    Jaishankar’s strong remarks came after Pakistan Foreign Minister Bilawal Bhutto raised the Kashmir issue while speaking in the Council debate on reformed multilateralism.

    Jaishankar arrived here Tuesday to preside over two signature events on counter-terrorism and reformed multilateralism being held under India’s current Presidency of the UN Security Council, before the curtains come down this month on the country’s two-year tenure as an elected member of the powerful 15-nation.

    India’s Permanent Representative to the UN Ambassador Ruchira Kamboj was chairing the debate when Bhutto spoke in the Council.

    Tensions between India and Pakistan have spiked since New Delhi abrogated Article 370 of the Constitution to revoke the special status of Jammu and Kashmir on August 5, 2019.

    India’s decision evoked strong reactions from Pakistan, which downgraded diplomatic ties and expelled the Indian envoy.

    India has categorically told the international community that the scrapping of Article 370 was its internal matter. It also advised Pakistan to accept the reality and stop all anti-India propaganda.

    India has told Pakistan that it desires normal neighbourly relations with Islamabad in an environment free of terror, hostility and violence.

  • Jaishankar to visit Moscow amid shadow of Ukraine war

    Express News Service

    NEW DELHI: Despite the conflict in Ukraine dragging and constant pressure from Western nations “to curtail tes with Moscow”, India has affirmed its relationship with Russia. There is strong bilateral trade between the two nations and in a bid to bolster this, External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar will visit Moscow next week (November 7 to 8). 

    He will meet his counterpart, Sergei Lavrov, and also the trade minister and Deputy Prime Minister of the Russian Federation. Jaishankar and Lavrov met four times in 2021. Besides, Prime Minister Modi and other senior ministers like Defence Minister Rajnath Singh have met their Russian counterparts regularly. Russia announced Jaishankar’s visit last week.

    “The external affairs minister will meet his counterpart, Sergey Lavrov, the foreign minister of Russia. Discussions are expected to cover the entire range of bilateral issues as well as exchange of views on various regional and international developments,” MEA Spokesperson Arindam Bagchi said at a media briefing.

    “The external affairs minister will also meet Deputy Prime Minister of the Russian Federation and Minister of Trade and Industry Denis Manturov, his counterpart for the India-Russia Inter-Governmental Commission on Trade, Economic, Scientific, Technological and Cultural Cooperation (IRIGC-TEC),” Bagchi said.

    NEW DELHI: Despite the conflict in Ukraine dragging and constant pressure from Western nations “to curtail tes with Moscow”, India has affirmed its relationship with Russia. There is strong bilateral trade between the two nations and in a bid to bolster this, External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar will visit Moscow next week (November 7 to 8). 

    He will meet his counterpart, Sergei Lavrov, and also the trade minister and Deputy Prime Minister of the Russian Federation. Jaishankar and Lavrov met four times in 2021. Besides, Prime Minister Modi and other senior ministers like Defence Minister Rajnath Singh have met their Russian counterparts regularly. 
    Russia announced Jaishankar’s visit last week.

    “The external affairs minister will meet his counterpart, Sergey Lavrov, the foreign minister of Russia. Discussions are expected to cover the entire range of bilateral issues as well as exchange of views on various regional and international developments,” MEA Spokesperson Arindam Bagchi said at a media briefing.

    “The external affairs minister will also meet Deputy Prime Minister of the Russian Federation and Minister of Trade and Industry Denis Manturov, his counterpart for the India-Russia Inter-Governmental Commission on Trade, Economic, Scientific, Technological and Cultural Cooperation (IRIGC-TEC),” Bagchi said.

  • EAM Jaishankar pitches for better connectivity in SCO region

    By PTI

    NEW DELHI: External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar on Tuesday pitched for better connectivity in the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) region, but underlined that such projects should respect the sovereignty and territorial integrity of member states.

    In an address at a virtual meeting of the SCO Council of Heads of Government (CHG), Jaishankar said the Chabahar port and the International North-South Transport Corridor could become enablers for connectivity in the region.

    “Represented India at the meeting of SCO Council of Heads of Government which has just concluded. Underlined that we need better connectivity in the SCO region built on centrality of interests of Central Asian states,” he tweeted. 

    Represented India at the meeting of SCO Council of Heads of Government which has just concluded.-Underlined that we need better connectivity in the SCO region built on centrality of interests of Central Asian states. pic.twitter.com/9EjQrekpaX
    — Dr. S. Jaishankar (@DrSJaishankar) November 1, 2022
    The external affairs minister said, “connectivity projects should respect the sovereignty and territorial integrity of member states and respect international law”. His remarks are seen as a reference to China’s Belt and Road initiative.

    “Our total trade with SCO Members is only $141 billion, which has the potential to increase manifold. Fair market access is to our mutual benefit and the only way to move forward,” Jaishankar said.

    The CHG meeting is held annually and focuses on the trade and economic agenda of the bloc and approves its annual budget.

    The SCO was founded at a summit in Shanghai in 2001 by the presidents of Russia, China, the Kyrgyz Republic, Kazakhstan, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan. Over the years, it has emerged as one of the largest trans-regional international organisations. India and Pakistan became permanent members in 2017.

    The annual SCO summit took place in the Uzbek city of Samarkand last month. Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Russian President Vladimir Putin, Chinese President Xi Jinping and other leaders of the grouping attended it.

    Usually, the heads of government meeting of the SCO is represented by foreign ministers while a number of countries send their prime ministers also.

    NEW DELHI: External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar on Tuesday pitched for better connectivity in the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) region, but underlined that such projects should respect the sovereignty and territorial integrity of member states.

    In an address at a virtual meeting of the SCO Council of Heads of Government (CHG), Jaishankar said the Chabahar port and the International North-South Transport Corridor could become enablers for connectivity in the region.

    “Represented India at the meeting of SCO Council of Heads of Government which has just concluded. Underlined that we need better connectivity in the SCO region built on centrality of interests of Central Asian states,” he tweeted. 

    Represented India at the meeting of SCO Council of Heads of Government which has just concluded.
    -Underlined that we need better connectivity in the SCO region built on centrality of interests of Central Asian states. pic.twitter.com/9EjQrekpaX
    — Dr. S. Jaishankar (@DrSJaishankar) November 1, 2022
    The external affairs minister said, “connectivity projects should respect the sovereignty and territorial integrity of member states and respect international law”. His remarks are seen as a reference to China’s Belt and Road initiative.

    “Our total trade with SCO Members is only $141 billion, which has the potential to increase manifold. Fair market access is to our mutual benefit and the only way to move forward,” Jaishankar said.

    The CHG meeting is held annually and focuses on the trade and economic agenda of the bloc and approves its annual budget.

    The SCO was founded at a summit in Shanghai in 2001 by the presidents of Russia, China, the Kyrgyz Republic, Kazakhstan, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan. Over the years, it has emerged as one of the largest trans-regional international organisations. India and Pakistan became permanent members in 2017.

    The annual SCO summit took place in the Uzbek city of Samarkand last month. Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Russian President Vladimir Putin, Chinese President Xi Jinping and other leaders of the grouping attended it.

    Usually, the heads of government meeting of the SCO is represented by foreign ministers while a number of countries send their prime ministers also.

  • Jaishankar and UK Foreign Secretary Cleverly discuss Ukraine conflict, Indo-Pacific situation 

    By PTI

    NEW DELHI: The Ukraine conflict and the situation in Indo-Pacific figured prominently in talks between External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar and visiting British Foreign Secretary James Cleverly on Saturday.

    It is learnt that the two sides also took stock of the ongoing negotiations for the proposed Indo-UK free trade agreement.

    Cleverly arrived in India on Friday on a two-day visit primarily to attend a special meeting of the UN Security Council Counter Terrorism Committee.

    It is the first visit by a top-ranking official from Britain after Rishi Sunak took charge as the UK’s first Indian-origin prime minister on Tuesday.

    “Delighted to welcome UK Foreign Secretary @JamesCleverly on his first India visit; shortly after our meeting in New York last month,” Jaishankar tweeted.

    Delighted to welcome UK Foreign Secretary @JamesCleverly on his first India visit; shortly after our meeting in New York last month.Noted the progress in our Roadmap 2030. Also discussed the Ukraine conflict and the Indo-Pacific. pic.twitter.com/LCmYJPGGFr
    — Dr. S. Jaishankar (@DrSJaishankar) October 29, 2022
    “Noted the progress in our Roadmap 2030. Also discussed the Ukraine conflict and the Indo-Pacific,” he added.

    During the visit, the British foreign secretary announced further collaboration between the UK and India through British International Investment.

    This included 11 million pounds of UK funding invested in Kinara Capital, a woman-led fintech company, according to the British High Commission.

    British International Investment is designed to strengthen trade ties with the UK’s partners and generate economic growth.

    The high commission said Cleverly also announced a 22 million pounds investment by the UK-backed Neev II Fund into Hygenco which will help India’s green energy transition by pioneering green hydrogen.

    India hosted the meeting of the UN Security Council Counter Terrorism Committee in its capacity as its chair.

    While the first day’s meeting took place in Mumbai on Friday, the second day’s deliberations were in Delhi on Saturday.

    The India-UK relationship was elevated to a Comprehensive Strategic Partnership during the India-UK virtual summit held between Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his then British counterpart Boris Johnson in May last year.

    At the summit, the two sides adopted a 10-year roadmap to expand ties in the key areas of trade and economy, defence and security, climate change and people-to-people connections among others.

    The two sides are also carrying out negotiations for the early finalisation of the free trade agreement.

    In April, the two sides had set a Diwali deadline for concluding the FTA but the deal could not be finalised in view of differences over certain issues as well as political developments in the UK.

    On the sidelines of the UN meeting, Jaishankar also met the UAE’s Minister of State for International Cooperation Reem Al Hashimy and Albania’s Deputy foreign Minister Albania Megi Fino.

    “So nice to meet with UAE Minister of State for International Cooperation Reem Al Hashimy. Her participation at the UNSC special meeting reflects the trust of our Comprehensive Strategic Partnership. Discussed shared threat terrorism poses to the world and the global responses,” Jaishankar tweeted.

    So nice to meet with UAE Minister of State for International Cooperation Reem Al Hashimy. Her participation at the UNSC special meeting reflects the trust of our Comprehensive Strategic Partnership.Discussed shared threat terrorism poses to the world and the global responses. pic.twitter.com/nwFItR8GV6
    — Dr. S. Jaishankar (@DrSJaishankar) October 29, 2022
    On his meeting with Megi, he said the full potential of the bilateral relationship was discussed.

    “A good meeting with Megi Fino, Deputy FM of Albania. Her participation at the UNSC special  meeting reflects our excellent coop’n during our UNSC tenure.Discussed exploring the full potential of our bilateral relationship. We will also cooperate closely in multilateral forums,” he said.

    NEW DELHI: The Ukraine conflict and the situation in Indo-Pacific figured prominently in talks between External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar and visiting British Foreign Secretary James Cleverly on Saturday.

    It is learnt that the two sides also took stock of the ongoing negotiations for the proposed Indo-UK free trade agreement.

    Cleverly arrived in India on Friday on a two-day visit primarily to attend a special meeting of the UN Security Council Counter Terrorism Committee.

    It is the first visit by a top-ranking official from Britain after Rishi Sunak took charge as the UK’s first Indian-origin prime minister on Tuesday.

    “Delighted to welcome UK Foreign Secretary @JamesCleverly on his first India visit; shortly after our meeting in New York last month,” Jaishankar tweeted.

    Delighted to welcome UK Foreign Secretary @JamesCleverly on his first India visit; shortly after our meeting in New York last month.
    Noted the progress in our Roadmap 2030. Also discussed the Ukraine conflict and the Indo-Pacific. pic.twitter.com/LCmYJPGGFr
    — Dr. S. Jaishankar (@DrSJaishankar) October 29, 2022
    “Noted the progress in our Roadmap 2030. Also discussed the Ukraine conflict and the Indo-Pacific,” he added.

    During the visit, the British foreign secretary announced further collaboration between the UK and India through British International Investment.

    This included 11 million pounds of UK funding invested in Kinara Capital, a woman-led fintech company, according to the British High Commission.

    British International Investment is designed to strengthen trade ties with the UK’s partners and generate economic growth.

    The high commission said Cleverly also announced a 22 million pounds investment by the UK-backed Neev II Fund into Hygenco which will help India’s green energy transition by pioneering green hydrogen.

    India hosted the meeting of the UN Security Council Counter Terrorism Committee in its capacity as its chair.

    While the first day’s meeting took place in Mumbai on Friday, the second day’s deliberations were in Delhi on Saturday.

    The India-UK relationship was elevated to a Comprehensive Strategic Partnership during the India-UK virtual summit held between Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his then British counterpart Boris Johnson in May last year.

    At the summit, the two sides adopted a 10-year roadmap to expand ties in the key areas of trade and economy, defence and security, climate change and people-to-people connections among others.

    The two sides are also carrying out negotiations for the early finalisation of the free trade agreement.

    In April, the two sides had set a Diwali deadline for concluding the FTA but the deal could not be finalised in view of differences over certain issues as well as political developments in the UK.

    On the sidelines of the UN meeting, Jaishankar also met the UAE’s Minister of State for International Cooperation Reem Al Hashimy and Albania’s Deputy foreign Minister Albania Megi Fino.

    “So nice to meet with UAE Minister of State for International Cooperation Reem Al Hashimy. Her participation at the UNSC special meeting reflects the trust of our Comprehensive Strategic Partnership. Discussed shared threat terrorism poses to the world and the global responses,” Jaishankar tweeted.

    So nice to meet with UAE Minister of State for International Cooperation Reem Al Hashimy. Her participation at the UNSC special meeting reflects the trust of our Comprehensive Strategic Partnership.
    Discussed shared threat terrorism poses to the world and the global responses. pic.twitter.com/nwFItR8GV6
    — Dr. S. Jaishankar (@DrSJaishankar) October 29, 2022
    On his meeting with Megi, he said the full potential of the bilateral relationship was discussed.

    “A good meeting with Megi Fino, Deputy FM of Albania. Her participation at the UNSC special  meeting reflects our excellent coop’n during our UNSC tenure.Discussed exploring the full potential of our bilateral relationship. We will also cooperate closely in multilateral forums,” he said.

  • Terrorism one of gravest threats to humanity: Jaishankar at UN meet

    By PTI

    NEW DELHI: The counter-terror sanction regime of the United Nations has been effective to put countries on notice that turned terrorism into a state-funded enterprise, External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar said on Saturday, in an apparent reference to Pakistan.

    In an address at the meeting of the UN Security Council Counter-Terrorism Committee in Delhi, Jaishankar described terrorism as “one of the gravest threats” to humanity.

    He said despite efforts by the UN, the threat of terrorism is only growing and expanding, particularly in Asia and Africa.

    “The UN Security Council, in the past two decades, has evolved an important architecture, built primarily around the counter-terrorism sanctions regime, to combat this menace,” he said.

    “This has been very effective in putting those countries on notice that had turned terrorism into a state-funded enterprise,” Jaishankar said.

    “Despite this, the threat of terrorism is only growing and expanding, particularly in Asia and Africa, as successive reports of the 1267 Sanctions Committee Monitoring Reports have highlighted,” he added.

    The minister said the ethos of open societies is being used to attack freedom, tolerance and progress.

    He also spoke extensively on the use of new technologies by terror groups, saying the internet and social media platforms have turned into potent instruments in the “toolkit of terrorists and militant groups “In recent years, terrorist groups, their ideological fellow travellers, particularly in open and liberal societies, and ‘lone wolf’ attackers have significantly enhanced their capabilities by gaining access to these technologies,” Jaishankar said.

    “They use technology and money, and most importantly the ethos of open societies, to attack freedom, tolerance and progress,” he said.

    Jaishankar said another “add-on” to the existing worries for governments around the world is the use of unmanned aerial systems by terrorist groups and organised criminal networks.

    “The possibilities of using weaponised drones for terrorist purposes against strategic, infrastructure and commercial assets call for serious attention by the member states,” he said.

    NEW DELHI: The counter-terror sanction regime of the United Nations has been effective to put countries on notice that turned terrorism into a state-funded enterprise, External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar said on Saturday, in an apparent reference to Pakistan.

    In an address at the meeting of the UN Security Council Counter-Terrorism Committee in Delhi, Jaishankar described terrorism as “one of the gravest threats” to humanity.

    He said despite efforts by the UN, the threat of terrorism is only growing and expanding, particularly in Asia and Africa.

    “The UN Security Council, in the past two decades, has evolved an important architecture, built primarily around the counter-terrorism sanctions regime, to combat this menace,” he said.

    “This has been very effective in putting those countries on notice that had turned terrorism into a state-funded enterprise,” Jaishankar said.

    “Despite this, the threat of terrorism is only growing and expanding, particularly in Asia and Africa, as successive reports of the 1267 Sanctions Committee Monitoring Reports have highlighted,” he added.

    The minister said the ethos of open societies is being used to attack freedom, tolerance and progress.

    He also spoke extensively on the use of new technologies by terror groups, saying the internet and social media platforms have turned into potent instruments in the “toolkit of terrorists and militant groups “In recent years, terrorist groups, their ideological fellow travellers, particularly in open and liberal societies, and ‘lone wolf’ attackers have significantly enhanced their capabilities by gaining access to these technologies,” Jaishankar said.

    “They use technology and money, and most importantly the ethos of open societies, to attack freedom, tolerance and progress,” he said.

    Jaishankar said another “add-on” to the existing worries for governments around the world is the use of unmanned aerial systems by terrorist groups and organised criminal networks.

    “The possibilities of using weaponised drones for terrorist purposes against strategic, infrastructure and commercial assets call for serious attention by the member states,” he said.

  • High oil prices breaking our back, Jaishankar tells Blinken

    Express News Service

    NEW DELHI:  External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar on Tuesday told his US counterpart that developing countries are deeply concerned about oil prices as well as supply.

    Addressing a joint press conference with US Secretary of State Antony Blinken after holding bilateral talks in Washington, he said, “We are a $2,000 per capita economy. The price of oil is breaking our back.”

    Jaishankar said the energy market is under stress due to the Ukraine war and that not just the pricing but the very availability of oil has become an issue. He also clarified that India is able to service and supply military equipment purchased from Russia despite Western sanctions on Moscow, “Where we get our military supplies from is not an issue. We look at possibilities across the berth and exercise a choice which we believe is in our national interest. Having said that, we have also taken military aircraft from US, France and Israel as we have a tradition of multi-sourcing,’’ he added.

    On the Ukraine war, he said: “We have taken the position privately, publicly, confidentially and consistently that this conflict is not in anybody’s interest.” Blinken sought to justify the US’ F-16 aid to Pakistan, saying it helps it deal with threats emanating from Pakistan or from the region. “We’ve a responsibility to whomever we provide military equipment to, that it’s maintained and sustained,” he said.

    NEW DELHI:  External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar on Tuesday told his US counterpart that developing countries are deeply concerned about oil prices as well as supply.

    Addressing a joint press conference with US Secretary of State Antony Blinken after holding bilateral talks in Washington, he said, “We are a $2,000 per capita economy. The price of oil is breaking our back.”

    Jaishankar said the energy market is under stress due to the Ukraine war and that not just the pricing but the very availability of oil has become an issue. He also clarified that India is able to service and supply military equipment purchased from Russia despite Western sanctions on Moscow, “Where we get our military supplies from is not an issue. We look at possibilities across the berth and exercise a choice which we believe is in our national interest. Having said that, we have also taken military aircraft from US, France and Israel as we have a tradition of multi-sourcing,’’ he added.

    On the Ukraine war, he said: “We have taken the position privately, publicly, confidentially and consistently that this conflict is not in anybody’s interest.” Blinken sought to justify the US’ F-16 aid to Pakistan, saying it helps it deal with threats emanating from Pakistan or from the region. “We’ve a responsibility to whomever we provide military equipment to, that it’s maintained and sustained,” he said.

  • ‘State of border will determine state of India-China relationship’: Jaishankar

    By PTI

    NEW DELHI: The state of the border will determine the state of the India-China relationship, External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar said on Monday, asserting that ties must be based on mutual sensitivity, mutual respect, and mutual interest.

    The external affairs minister’s comments came amid the lingering military standoff between the two countries in a number of friction points in eastern Ladakh.

    In his address at the launch of the Asia Society Policy Institute, Jaishankar said much of the future of Asia depends on how relations between India and China develop in the foreseeable future and that the continent lacks an agreed architecture of any nature.

    “For ties to return to a positive trajectory and remain sustainable, they must be based on the three mutuals: mutual sensitivity, mutual respect and mutual interest,” he said.

    “Their current status is, of course, well known to all of you. I can only reiterate that the state of the border will determine the state of the relationship,” he added.

    Indian and Chinese troops have been engaged in a standoff at a number of friction points in eastern Ladakh for over two years.

    Though the two sides disengaged in several areas in the region as a result of high-level military talks, the deadlock stays without any major breakthrough.

    On the overall vision for Asia, Jaishankar said a narrow “Asian chauvinism” is actually against the continent’s own interest.

    “Precisely because Asia is so energetic and creative, it would like to benefit from the open doors of other regions.

    That obviously cannot be a one-way street,” he said.

    “Such an outlook also goes against the reality of globalisation. Whether it is resources, markets or supply chains, these can no longer be compartmentalised,” he said in an oblique reference to China’s policies.

    Jaishankar also said that Asia’s prospects and challenges are today very much dependent on developments in the Indo-Pacific.

    “In fact, the concept itself is a reflection of divided Asia, as some have a vested interest in keeping the region less cohesive and interactive,” he said.

    “That the global commons and the international community are better served by collaborative endeavours like the Quad apparently leaves them cold,” he said.

    China has been increasingly suspicious about the Quad that comprises India, the US, Australia, and Japan.

    “Developing even a basic strategic consensus in Asia is, therefore, clearly a formidable task.”

    “As the international order evolves, this desire to selectively retain elements of the 1945 situation while transforming others — and we see that in the UN as well — complicates world politics,” Jaishankar said.

    He said there are resident powers in Asia like the United States or the proximate ones like Australia who have legitimate interests in the continent.

    “Their contribution is also invaluable for securing the global commons. India’s universalist outlook, expressed in the belief of the world as a family, encourages it to go beyond exclusivist approaches,” he said.

    In a reference to the “Asia for Asian” approach of the Bandung Conference, he said it was encouraged by “political romanticism” which got a reality check within few years.

    Jaishankar said a united front works when participants are confident of the vision and that requires at least a moderate level of mutual trust.

    “Even in the past, this was not an easy challenge to address. It is obviously much more difficult now. Asia for Asians is also a sentiment that was encouraged in the past, even in our own country, by political romanticism,” he said.

    “The Bandung spirit, however, got its reality check within its first decade. Indeed, the experience of the past affirms that Asians are second to none when it comes to realpolitik,” he observed.

    The Bandung Conference of 1955 among India, Pakistan, Burma, and Ceylon (now Sri Lanka) and some other countries was considered a major initiative as the leaders of the participating nations agreed on peaceful coexistence and freedom from the superpowers’ hegemony in the backdrop of the Cold War between the US and the Soviet Union.

    Jaishankar said “three shocks”, of the Covid pandemic, the Ukraine conflict, and climatic disturbances, are also impacting the evolution of the Asian economy.

    “Together, they make a powerful case for more engines of growth and resilient and reliable supply chains,” he said.

    “There is a parallel debate underway in the digital world that focuses around trust and transparency. How these will translate into strategic outcomes is still too early to predict,” he added.

    NEW DELHI: The state of the border will determine the state of the India-China relationship, External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar said on Monday, asserting that ties must be based on mutual sensitivity, mutual respect, and mutual interest.

    The external affairs minister’s comments came amid the lingering military standoff between the two countries in a number of friction points in eastern Ladakh.

    In his address at the launch of the Asia Society Policy Institute, Jaishankar said much of the future of Asia depends on how relations between India and China develop in the foreseeable future and that the continent lacks an agreed architecture of any nature.

    “For ties to return to a positive trajectory and remain sustainable, they must be based on the three mutuals: mutual sensitivity, mutual respect and mutual interest,” he said.

    “Their current status is, of course, well known to all of you. I can only reiterate that the state of the border will determine the state of the relationship,” he added.

    Indian and Chinese troops have been engaged in a standoff at a number of friction points in eastern Ladakh for over two years.

    Though the two sides disengaged in several areas in the region as a result of high-level military talks, the deadlock stays without any major breakthrough.

    On the overall vision for Asia, Jaishankar said a narrow “Asian chauvinism” is actually against the continent’s own interest.

    “Precisely because Asia is so energetic and creative, it would like to benefit from the open doors of other regions.

    That obviously cannot be a one-way street,” he said.

    “Such an outlook also goes against the reality of globalisation. Whether it is resources, markets or supply chains, these can no longer be compartmentalised,” he said in an oblique reference to China’s policies.

    Jaishankar also said that Asia’s prospects and challenges are today very much dependent on developments in the Indo-Pacific.

    “In fact, the concept itself is a reflection of divided Asia, as some have a vested interest in keeping the region less cohesive and interactive,” he said.

    “That the global commons and the international community are better served by collaborative endeavours like the Quad apparently leaves them cold,” he said.

    China has been increasingly suspicious about the Quad that comprises India, the US, Australia, and Japan.

    “Developing even a basic strategic consensus in Asia is, therefore, clearly a formidable task.”

    “As the international order evolves, this desire to selectively retain elements of the 1945 situation while transforming others — and we see that in the UN as well — complicates world politics,” Jaishankar said.

    He said there are resident powers in Asia like the United States or the proximate ones like Australia who have legitimate interests in the continent.

    “Their contribution is also invaluable for securing the global commons. India’s universalist outlook, expressed in the belief of the world as a family, encourages it to go beyond exclusivist approaches,” he said.

    In a reference to the “Asia for Asian” approach of the Bandung Conference, he said it was encouraged by “political romanticism” which got a reality check within few years.

    Jaishankar said a united front works when participants are confident of the vision and that requires at least a moderate level of mutual trust.

    “Even in the past, this was not an easy challenge to address. It is obviously much more difficult now. Asia for Asians is also a sentiment that was encouraged in the past, even in our own country, by political romanticism,” he said.

    “The Bandung spirit, however, got its reality check within its first decade. Indeed, the experience of the past affirms that Asians are second to none when it comes to realpolitik,” he observed.

    The Bandung Conference of 1955 among India, Pakistan, Burma, and Ceylon (now Sri Lanka) and some other countries was considered a major initiative as the leaders of the participating nations agreed on peaceful coexistence and freedom from the superpowers’ hegemony in the backdrop of the Cold War between the US and the Soviet Union.

    Jaishankar said “three shocks”, of the Covid pandemic, the Ukraine conflict, and climatic disturbances, are also impacting the evolution of the Asian economy.

    “Together, they make a powerful case for more engines of growth and resilient and reliable supply chains,” he said.

    “There is a parallel debate underway in the digital world that focuses around trust and transparency. How these will translate into strategic outcomes is still too early to predict,” he added.