Eastern Eye (UK)

India calls for an end to war as it takes charge of G20 presidency

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INDIA opened its G20 presidency last Thursday (1) with prime minister Narendra Modi calling for an end to war, implicitly rebuking longstandi­ng ally Russia for its invasion of Ukraine.

Modi has pressed Russian president Vladimir Putin to end the conflict, including at a faceto-face meeting on the sidelines of a major regional summit in September. He reiterated that call in an article outlining India’s ambitions for the G20 forum – of which Russia is a member – released by the government and published by the Telegraph.

“Today, we do not need to fight for our survival – our era need not be one of war. Indeed, it must not be one!” Modi wrote.

The invasion of Ukraine, a country known as the “breadbaske­t of Europe”, has periodical­ly disrupted grain shipments and raised the spectre of a global food crisis.

Modi said India would “seek to depolitici­se the global supply of food, fertiliser­s and medical products, so that geo-political tensions do not lead to humanitari­an crises”.

“As in our own families, those whose needs are the greatest must always be our first concern,” he said.

New Delhi has long walked a tightrope in its relations with the West and Moscow – and the Russian invasion of Ukraine has highlighte­d the difficulty of that balancing act. It has repeatedly brushed off calls from Washington to condemn Moscow, despite pursuing greater security ties with the United States.

Putin visited New Delhi last year, bear-hugging Modi and hailing India as a “great power” as the two men bolstered military and energy ties.

Russia remains by far India’s biggest arms supplier.

India has shied away from explicit condemnati­ons of Russia over the war despite its economy being stung by the soaring oil and commoditie­s prices that followed the invasion.

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