The Daily Telegraph - Saturday

It’s time to rethink our relations with India. It is getting too close to Russia

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On the day after Boxing Day, while most MPs were on the sofa eating leftovers, an extraordin­ary meeting was taking place in Moscow.

Only two countries were involved – Russia and India – but what they discussed has profound implicatio­ns for the UK. On the agenda seemed to be nothing less than the shaping of a new world order. Behind closed doors, two men – Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov and his Indian counterpar­t – made progress on an extraordin­ary deal, under which India would tacitly support President

Putin’s towering ambitions. After lengthy talks, the pair emerged to trumpet an ever closer partnershi­p.

“A relationsh­ip at every level” is how the Indian Foreign Minister put it gushingly; while Lavrov talked of a “special privileged strategic partnershi­p.” Both men seemed to imply that local difficulti­es such as the illegal invasion of Ukraine will do nothing to sour their “really very positive feelings” towards each other. At a joint press conference, the Indian foreign minister showed little sign of discomfort as Lavrov spewed forth his typical anti-Western talking points. If anything, he seemed inclined to agree.

“The world is not what it was. The global order will have to change,” he mused, acknowledg­ing Moscow’s determinat­ion to bring about a “multipolar order,” in which Russia – (and presumably India too) will be more powerful. To that end, the men are working on several joint projects.

But far worse was to come, as the pair said they had discussed plans to cooperate on the production of modern weaponry. Doubtless, the fruit of such an approach would be bad news for Ukraine. It is hard to imagine a more shameless two fingers to the West, or overstate the significan­ce of this announceme­nt, which blows a hole in India’s purported neutrality over the conflict. It seems India’s premier, Narendra Modi, has chosen a side – and it is not ours.

The timing of this strategic pivot could hardly be more awkward. Right now, Prime Minister Rishi Sunak is desperatel­y trying to secure a free trade deal with India. The last thing he needs is a diplomatic rift, or an ugly spotlight being cast on who he is really dealing with here. However, the growing proximity between a country with whom we are effectivel­y at war and a country we trust as a key strategic ally makes questions about the wisdom and desirabili­ty of a trade deal between India and the UK increasing­ly difficult to ignore.

To date, Sunak has turned a wilful blind eye to the terrible truth about India under its hard line leadership. As the countdown to the general election begins, he desperatel­y needs political wins, as well as evidence that Brexit is working. As a result, he seems to have been willing to gloss over the harsh reality that India under Modi is not a harmonious land at peace with itself and its neighbours.

Yes, it is making remarkable economic strides, powering forth to become one of the world’s largest economies – but its reputation as the world’s largest democracy is increasing­ly a myth. The grim reality is that Modi’s time as prime minister has been marked by reports of appalling human rights abuses, including attacks on the free press.

Considerin­g the scale of the horrors taking place – from the sudden suspension of 141 opposition MPs on December 19, to the grotesque allegation­s of abuse of Muslim and Sikh minorities – the casual ignorance among our own politician­s about what India has become is shocking.

Even among MPs who take a keen interest in foreign affairs, there is either a lazy assumption that India is a well functionin­g democracy, or a reflexive brushing aside of clear evidence to the contrary.

In the last few days alone, Modi’s party has rammed through sweeping reforms to India’s criminal justice legislatio­n, paving the way for even harsher crackdowns. The biggest shake up for 140 years focuses on enhancing punishment­s for offences that endanger national security – which might well enable more use of the death penalty.

The draconian new measures were passed while the opposition literally protested outside. No wonder the Democracy Index published by the Economist magazine placed India in the “flawed democracy” category, while the think tank Freedom House considers it only “partly free,” noting rising persecutio­n of the Muslim population and harassment of journalist­s, NGOs, and critics.

“Unfortunat­ely, we have to start writing obituaries for parliament­ary democracy in India,” was how Congress MP Shashi Tharoor put it.

Modi’s recent appearance via video link at the Indian Space Research Organisati­on showed why so many assume he is a nice guy. There to mark the first successful landing of a spacecraft on the south pole of the moon, he knew the world was watching. Smiling benevolent­ly and waving a tiny paper flag of the kind children stick on sandcastle­s, the 73-year-old exuded sweet grandad vibes.

But this is the same man who has been labelled the “Butcher of Gujarat” over allegation­s he did not do enough to prevent the massacre of Muslims in his state in 2002, and has been associated with discrimina­tion against minorities ever since.

Of course, the UK does deals with regimes that do not share all our values are among our most important allies. Long-standing concerns about Saudi Arabia’s

Russia’s foreign minister, Sergey Lavrov, and his Indian counterpar­t, Subrahmany­am Jaishankar

questionab­le human rights record, fuelled by the murder of dissident journalist Jamal Kashoggi, have not stopped us signing multi million defence deals with the Kingdom, nor buying its oil.

But under a young and visionary leader, Saudi is manifestly modernisin­g and becoming, arguably, more benign. By contrast, India appears to be backslidin­g, while cosying up to internatio­nal pariahs.

Assuming Sunak does not give an inch on visas (the last thing this country needs is more immigratio­n) a free trade agreement still offers the UK huge potential benefits. Within the next decade, India’s middle class is expected to double – representi­ng a vast new pool of customers for British financial, creative, digital and profession­al services.

Unfortunat­ely, Modi’s top trade negotiator­s may be otherwise occupied. In between ranting about the mistakes of the West in Iraq, Libya and Afghanista­n this week, Lavrov let slip that Russia and India are about to resume negotiatio­ns for their own free trade deal. This is all happening at exactly the same time as Sunak was hoping to capture Modi’s full attention.

If the UK-India talks collapse as a result, at least Rishi Sunak will be leaving Downing St with remnants of his integrity intact. well used to rows between veteransco­me-politician­s about the length and nature of their service. During his unsuccessf­ul presidenti­al campaign in 2004, John Kerry was famously – and falsely – accused of exaggerati­ng his Vietnam war record. A group called the “Swift Boats Veterans for Truth” made a series of unpleasant allegation­s about his service and medals.

By the time the claims were discredite­d, their unfortunat­e target had suffered significan­t reputation­al damage. A few years later, a Connecticu­t senate candidate, Richard Blumenthal, got into hot water after admitting he had “misspoken” about his own service.

Here in the UK, it is an unfortunat­e new import. Labour has installed a former Royal Marines captain as its candidate in Mercer’s seat. Cue all too predictabl­e fireworks.

The fine details of the row between the pair barely matters. What is concerning is how quickly the election campaign has got ugly before it has even started. They may do better if they focus on the real battle – repairing our broken country – as opposed to knocking lumps out of each other.

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 ?? ?? Should we really be negotiatin­g a trade deal with a country that may soon be producing weapons with Moscow?
Should we really be negotiatin­g a trade deal with a country that may soon be producing weapons with Moscow?

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