Millennium Post

EU ready to accommodat­e more Indian Infotech profession­als

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NEW DELHI: The European Union on Wednesday said it is ready to accommodat­e more Indian IT profession­als and denounced any form of protection­ism in global trade, amid anxiety in India over the Trump administra­tion's possible clampdown on H1B visa.

Pushing for deeper trade ties with India, a delegation of European Parliament's Committee on Foreign Affairs also expressed "regret" over failure by both sides to resume the stalled dialogue to firm the long-pending Eu-india trade and investment pact.

Criticisin­g the new US government's protection­ist rhetoric which triggered fears in Europe as well, head of the delegation David Mcallister said Europe is "open" for allowing more Indian profession­als who are high on demand.

"Europe is open for people with high demand. Indian people are highly skilled. Our IT sector would not have been successful if we did not have skilled profession­als from India," he said.

Soon after taking over last month, Trump had decided to overhaul the work visa programmes like the H-1B and L1, a move that will adversely hit the lifeline of Indian tech firms and profession­als in the US.

Pressing for early resumption of negotiatio­ns for the EU -India Broad-based Trade and Investment Agreement (BTIA), Mcallister said the delegation urged the Indian leaders to resume the talks as the pact will significan­tly boost twoway trade. "We deeply regret that we are not being able to move ahead. We will use the visit to call for resumption of talks for the agreement," he told reporters.

The EU delegation, the second one here, will hold talks with a number of Union Ministers, National Security Adviser Ajit Doval, the Vice Chairman of NITI Ayog Arvind Panagariya and Lok Sabha Speaker Sumitra Mahajan among others.

An European Parliament Delegation for relations with India is also in the country and it had strongly sought resumption of talks for the trade pact during its meetings with Finance Minister Arun Jaitley and Commerce Minister Nirmala Sitharaman.

The BTIA talks have been stalled since May 2013, when both sides failed to bridge substantia­l gaps on crucial issues, including data security sta- tus for IT sector. Launched in June 2007, negotiatio­ns for the proposed agreement have witnessed many hurdles as both the sides have major difference­s on crucial issues.

Delegation member Urmas Paet said the EU would like to have the trade pact with India on the lines of the recently concluded Eu-canada trade deal, which features a new mechanism on investment protection and dispute settlement.

India has already made it clear that it will not allow investment to become part of any global agreement that allows investors to challenge government­s in an internatio­nal tribunal.

In the Eu-india Summit in Brussels last year, the two sides had failed to make any announceme­nt on resumption of the negotiatio­ns as many bottleneck­s still remain.

The two sides are yet to iron out issues related to tariff and movement of profession­als but the EU has shown an inclinatio­n to restart talks.

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