Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Taj Mahal but no trade deal for Trump in India

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AHMEDABAD, Feb 22 ( AFP) - US President Donald Trump will open the world's biggest cricket stadium and watch the sun set at the famed Taj Mahal during a lightning visit to India starting Monday, but behind the spectacula­r optics he is expected to face a protection­ist counter-punch on trade.

Trump's blossoming bromance with Prime Minister Narendra Modi that will be on show again belies prickly relations, particular­ly over commerce, with both men ramping up protection­ist measures.

Experts say this has hurt US efforts to make India a strategic counterwei­ght to China, while Trump's mediation offer in the long-running Kashmir dispute with Pakistan has annoyed New Delhi.

“We're not treated very well by India, but I happen to like Prime Minister Modi a lot,” Trump, 73, said before his maiden official visit to the nation of 1.3 billion with First Lady Melania, daughter Ivanka and son-in-law Jared Kushner.

Trump told a rally on Thursday that “six to 10 million people” would be along the route of his motorcade, but this appears to be a misunderst­anding. Organisers said there will be tens of thousands.

A 700-metre wall has been built, allegedly to hide a slum, while constructi­on workers have been rushing to complete the Sardar Patel Stadium. It will be rammed with around 100,000 people for an event dubbed “Namaste Trump”, payback for a “Howdy, Modi” rally in Houston last year in front of some of America's vast Indian diaspora.

Reports suggest Trump and Modi may agree a modest trade pact covering items including imports of Harley- Davidson motorcycle­s and US dairy products such as pizza cheese, as well as a number of defence and other deals.

But this will fall short of the comprehens­ive agreement the world's largest economy and the planet's biggest democracy have been seeking for years.

 ??  ?? Students paint murals of US President Donald Trump and first lady Melania Trump on canvas sheets along a street in Mumbai, India, February 21, 2020. (Reuters/Francis Mascarenha­s)
Students paint murals of US President Donald Trump and first lady Melania Trump on canvas sheets along a street in Mumbai, India, February 21, 2020. (Reuters/Francis Mascarenha­s)

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