Times of Oman

Abe to launch $17b Indian bullet train project

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NEW DELHI/TOKYO: Japan’s Prime Minister Shinzo Abe will lay the foundation stone for India’s first bullet train in Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s home state this week, in a tightening of ties just days after New Delhi ended a military confrontat­ion with China.

The move by Abe, who starts a two-day visit to India on Wednesday, highlights an early lead for Japan in a sector where the Chinese have also been trying to secure a foothold, but without much success.

Modi has made the 500-kmlong high-speed rail link between the financial hub of Mumbai and the industrial city of Ahmedabad in Gujarat a centrepiec­e of his efforts to showcase India’s ability to build cutting-edge infrastruc­ture.

The leaders will launch the start of work on the line on Thurs- day, India’s railways ministry said in a statement.

“This technology will revolution­ise and transform the transport sector,” said Railways Minister Piyush Goyal, welcoming the prospects for growth brought by Japan’s high-speed “shinkansen” technology.

In Tokyo, a Japanese foreign ministry official told reporters, “We would like to support ‘Make in India’ as much as possible,” referring to Modi’s signature policy to lure investors in manufactur­ing.

“And for that, we want to do what’s beyond the MumbaiAhme­dabad line and achieve economies of scale.” India would make “all-out efforts” to complete the line by August 2022, more than a year earlier than planned, the government said this week.

Japan is providing 81 per cent of the funding for the $16.9-billion project, through a 50-year loan at 0.1 per cent annual interest.

Japanese investment into India has surged in areas ranging from automotive­s to infrastruc­ture in the remote northeast, making Tokyo its third-largest foreign direct investor.

 ?? - Reuters ?? GEARING UP: A worker cleans a hoarding featuring India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his Japanese counterpar­t Shinzo Abe ahead of Abe’s visit, in Ahmedabad, India, on Tuesday.
- Reuters GEARING UP: A worker cleans a hoarding featuring India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his Japanese counterpar­t Shinzo Abe ahead of Abe’s visit, in Ahmedabad, India, on Tuesday.

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