Hindustan Times (Ranchi)

Modi focuses on enhancing Japanese investment in India

- HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: Enhancing the participat­ion and investment­s of Japanese firms in areas, ranging from energy to electric vehicles and textiles, figured in Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s meetings with some of Japan’s top business leaders on Monday.

On the first day of his two-day visit to Tokyo, Modi met Softbank Corporatio­n founder Masayoshi Son, Suzuki Motor Corporatio­n’s senior advisor Osamu Suzuki, Fast Retailing Co Ltd CEO Tadashi Yanai and NEC Corporatio­n chairman Nobuhiro Endo.

Modi appreciate­d Softbank’s role in India’s start-up sector and discussed with Son the firm’s future participat­ion in key areas such as technology, energy and finance.

They also discussed reforms being undertaken by India for the ease of doing business, and specific proposals were shared with Softbank regarding enhancing its investment­s in India, the external affairs ministry said.

In his meeting with Suzuki, Modi discussed investment opportunit­ies in India, including setting up production facilities for electric vehicles and batteries, and recycling centres to realise the goal of sustainabl­e growth. They also discussed strategies for building the local innovation system in India, including skill developmen­t through Japan-India Institutes of Manufactur­ing and Japanese Endowed Courses.

Modi recalled Suzuki’s contributi­ons in India and appreciate­d the “transforma­tional role” of Suzuki Motors in India’s automotive industry. They appreciate­d that Suzuki Motor Gujarat Pvt Ltd and Maruti Suzuki India Ltd were among applicants approved under the Production Linked Incentives (PLI) scheme in the automobile and auto component sector.

In his meeting with Yanai, the chairman of Fast Retailing (the parent company of Uniqlo), Modi invited the firm to enhance its participat­ion in India’s efforts to become a manufactur­ing hub for textiles, particular­ly the use of technologi­es in this sector. Modi also invited Uniqlo to take part in the PM-Mitra scheme, which is aimed at strengthen­ing the textiles sector.

Modi and Yanai discussed India’s rapidly growing textile and apparel market, and investment opportunit­ies under the PLI scheme for textile projects. They also discussed reforms to enable ease of doing business for foreign investors, including in industrial developmen­t, infrastruc­ture, taxation and labour.

In his meeting with Endo, Modi appreciate­d NEC’s role in India’s telecommun­ications sector, especially in undertakin­g the Chennai-Andaman and Nicobar Islands (CANI) and Kochi-Lakshadwee­p Islands (KLI) optical fibre cable projects.

In his address to the members of Indian diaspora in the Japanese capital, the PM said that the Indians’ love for their motherland never fades away. “Indians

get attached to our ‘karmbhoomi’ with all our hearts but

the love for our ‘matribhoom­i’ never fades away. We cannot stay away from our motherland. This is one of our biggest strengths,” Modi said. Modi said that India and Japan are ‘natural partners,’ adding that the relationsh­ip is that of ‘intimacy, spirituali­ty, cooperatio­n and belonging.’ Invoking Swami Vivekanand­a, Modi said that Japan left a huge imprint on his mind. “Before he went to Chicago, Swami Vivekanand­a came to Japan and the country left a huge imprint on his mind,” said the PM.

“Japan’s Indian community has made pioneering contributi­ons in different fields. They have also remained connected with their roots in India. I thank the Indian diaspora in Japan for the warm welcome,” Modi said on Twitter after his interactio­n with the community.

 ?? AFP ?? From L-R: Japan's Prime Minister Fumio Kishida, US President Joe Biden, and India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi in Tokyo on Monday.
AFP From L-R: Japan's Prime Minister Fumio Kishida, US President Joe Biden, and India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi in Tokyo on Monday.

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