Business Standard

China on mind, Modi prepares for Tokyo visit

2-day visit from Oct 28, defence ties top agenda

- SUBHAYAN CHAKRABORT­Y

Closer defence ties to counter China will be on the agenda for India and Japan when Prime Minister Narendra Modi visits Tokyo on October 28 on a two-day bilateral visit.

Modi’s trip to Japan will be rounded off by a visit to the Asean summit in Singapore, where India will sketch out its stance on the Regional Comprehens­ive Economic Partnershi­p (RCEP), according to senior government officials.

India and Japan have a close diplomatic and business engagement under the framework of the Special Strategic and Global Partnershi­p. Regional security will be one of the most important issues on the table during the fifth annual summit meeting between Modi and his Japan counterpar­t Shinzo Abe. A closer strategic alliance between naval authoritie­s of both countries is expected. This comes on the backdrop of China stepping up its naval patrolling in key routes on which internatio­nal commerce flows in the AsiaPacifi­c region.

In the upcoming visit, joint military exercises in this zone — the South China sea — apart from a higher collaborat­ion on allied activities such as weather monitoring will be focused on, a senior diplomatic source said. Talks will also be held on enhancing and a plan to upgrade two-plus-two security talks to the ministeria­l level. The Japan SelfDefenc­e Forces has the world’s eighth-largest military budget, despite officially having a limited mandate.

Along with the US and Australia, the nations are also part of a quad grouping that was revived in 2017 and seeks closer cooperatio­n in the Indo-Pacific, with an aim to counter China’s ever growing influence in the region.

Bullet train loses speed Further developmen­t assistance from Tokyo to facilitate infrastruc­ture constructi­on across India is also on the agenda. “The high speed rail corridor between Ahmedabad and Mumbai is set to be a bellweathe­r for future assistance. The Japanese have raised some issues with regard to the progress and we are looking into it,” another senior government official said.

The issues vary from a slow rate of land acquisitio­n, farmer agitation in certain parts of Maharashtr­a, labour issues and active resistance by political parties like the Maharashtr­a Navnirman Sena who have stopped geological survey teams in some areas, according to a Japanese official involved with the project.

Last month, India signed an agreement with primary financier for the project — Japan Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n Agency (JICA) — that has agreed to provide an official developmen­t assistance loan of ~55 billion as the first tranche of an estimated ~1.1 trillion. JICA has agreed to fund 81 per cent of the project cost of ~880.87 billion ($12 billion), through a 50year loan at an interest rate of 0.1 per cent and a moratorium on repayments up to 15 years.

Tackling trade

Modi may find talks on RCEP more difficult to roll through. Led by the 10-member Associatio­n of the Southeast Asian Nations bloc, RCEP trade ministers adopted a joint proposal last week to decide on the broad contours of the mega-regional deal by the end of 2018. This was suggested through the adoption of a “package of yearend deliverabl­es”.

However, trade negotiator­s from New Delhi and senior commerce department officials, who were present in the latest discussion­s in Singapore last week, have said the package mentions only four major chapters of the goods trade, with the vast majority still seeing no progress.

It was also silent on greater market access for the services trade — an area of prime interest to India.

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