Oman Daily Observer

Ansari’s visit to boost ties with Poland

-

WARSAW: India and Poland will seek to further boost their close ties during the three-day state visit of Indian Vice President Mohammad Hamid Ansari here from April 26, that will also see the inking of some agreements.

Ansari, who is leading a highpowere­d delegation to Poland, will be accompanie­d by his wife, Salma Ansari. Preeti Saran, Secretary (East) in the Ministry of External Affairs, will lead the official team.

Four members of the Rajya Sabha will be part of the delegation, including Communist Party of India-Marxist General Secretary Sitaram Yechury, and D P Tripathi, spokespers­on of Nationalis­t Congress Party (NCP). Giriraj Singh, Minister of State for Micro Small and Medium Enterprise­s, is also part of the official team.

Since Poland does not have a post of Vice President, Polish Prime Minister Beata Szydlo will be the main hostess to welcome Ansari and she will lead the Polish official delegation.

It is an almost a unique precedent when the Polish prime minister will go out of her way to make a new protocol.

It also shows the extent of Poland’s cordiality towards India. A few agreements between the two sides will be signed to strengthen the bilateral ties. During his visit, Ansari will call on Polish President Andrzej Duda. The Polish President is likely to come on a state visit to India later this year.

He will also meet Stanislaw Karczewski, Speaker of the Senate who is the head of the Polish Upper House. Ansari will address the Economic Forum where Indian and Polish businessme­n will participat­e. This seminar is being organised by the Polish Ministry of Economic Developmen­t. The main emphasis will be how to increase bilateral trade, which is nearing $2 billion at present.

On April 28, Ansari will be the main speaker at Warsaw University, where he will speak to the faculty members on the success of ‘Seven Decades of Democracy in India’. The same day he will inaugurate the new complex of the Indian Embassy.

It took the Indian Foreign Ministry two decades to complete the project and now it is one of the most beautiful foreign missions in Warsaw.

Over the years the Indian diaspora has increased to around 5,000 people and some 3,000 Indian students have enrolled in different Polish Universiti­es and institutio­ns in the last five years.

The Indian community has full freedom to practise their religious beliefs. It has a Sikh Gurudwara and a Hindu temple too.

Traditiona­lly India and Poland have been on the best of terms ever since the two countries establishe­d diplomatic relations in 1954 after the death of Soviet ruler Joseph Stalin. It was Stalin’s veto that did not allow Poland to establish relations with newly independen­t countries of the Third World, including India.

Once they establishe­d normal diplomatic relations, their relationsh­ip remained strong.

In the past Jawaharlal Nehru, Indira Gandhi and Morarji Desai had visited Poland as Prime Ministers and Presidents V V Giri, Giani Zail Singh, S D Sharma and Pratibha Patil too made state visits to Poland in their tenure.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Oman