The Indian Express (Delhi Edition)

FORTY YEARS AGO

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INDO-SOVIET TRADE

INDIAN AND SOVIET representa­tives signed three agreements, one of which will provide India credit of 250 million rouble (amounting to Rs 225 crore). The other two agreements, which provided a grand finale to the three-day visit of Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko, are the setting up of a tropo-scatter all-weather communicat­ion link between the two countries and enlarging the trade plan of Rs 750 crore for this year by another Rs 160 crore. Indian exports under the supplement­ary agreement will mostly comprise steel and pig-iron against the one million tonnes of crude which the Soviet Union is to supply this year, part of which has already reached Bombay.

JANATA IMPORT POLICY

THE JANATA GOVERNMENT’S import policy envisages significan­t liberalisa­tion of imports of industrial raw materials and capital goods. Procedures have been simplified to secure better utilisatio­n of industrial potential and accelerate exports, said Commerce Minister Mohan Dharia. The new policy, based on the philosophy­of trust in trade, gives pride of place to the small sector. Its highlights include expansion of the open general licence and free licensing, abolition of the compulsory export obligation scheme and revamping the duty-free imports of raw materials.

BRITISH CITIZENSHI­PS

THE BRITISH GOVERNMENT has proposed the creation of two categories of British citizenshi­p — British citizenshi­p and British overseas citizenshi­p — in order to define those who have the right of entry into Britain and those who do not. According to this, British citizens would be those who have the right to entry into Britain, either by descent or because they were born, naturalise­d or registered, or they settled there for a specified time. British overseas citizenshi­p would be conferred on those who themselves or whose fathers, were born, naturalise­d or registered in an existing dependency.

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