India Dials Up Ties With Gulf Countries, Sharpens The Contrast With Pakistan
India is asking the Gulf countries to start opening its doors to the thousands
of workers who had come back during the pandemic
Foreign minister S Jaishankar will travel to Qatar and Kuwait and his deputy,
V Muraleedharan to Oman later this month as part of India’s continuing
outreach to Gulf countries that is described by Prime Minister Narendra Modi
as India’s extended neighbourhood, people familiar with the matter said on
Sunday as Indian Army chief General MM Naravane preps to begin his visit to
Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates (UAE).
Jaishankar, who had focused on deepening ties with West Asia through the Covid
pandemic, addressed the Gulf Cooperation Council leaders at the annual
political dialogue last month and later travelled to the UAE and Bahrain.
“India shares warm, close and multi-faceted relations with the Gulf countries
underpinned by historic cultural, religious and economic linkages,” a
government official said, underlining how New Delhi - after reaching out to
countries in the immediate neighbourhood for the past few weeks - had put the
spotlight on West Asia.
The dates and the specific agenda for the two ministerial visits to Qatar,
Kuwait and Oman later this month are still being worked out.
Officials told Hindustan Times that a key focus of this heightened engagement
at this point was to protect the interests of Indian workers who were employed
in the West Asian countries before the coronavirus pandemic disrupted economic
activity and plunged the global economy into a contraction.
India is asking the Gulf countries to start opening its doors to the thousands
of workers who had come back during the pandemic. This was also one of the
central themes of Jaishankar’s address to the GCC Troika in early November,
urging the GCC leadership to facilitate the return of Indian workers and
professionals eager to resume work through sustainable travel bubble
arrangements.
Officials believe that New Delhi’s efforts to reach out to the Gulf countries
through the peak of the pandemic when India sent not just medicines but
medical teams to countries in the “extended neighbourhood” had held the
country in good stead. The Indian gesture was reciprocated by the West Asian
countries as well. Like when the UAE was packing off immigrants from every
other country following the outbreak of the pandemic, India requested Kuwait
and the United Arab Emirates to go slow with repatriating Indian nationals
because the state governments didn’t have the infrastructure to deal with the
influx. The request was immediately accepted.
Six West Asian countries - UAE, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar and Bahrain
- accounted for nearly 70% of all Indians who live abroad. UAE is home to the
largest number of Indians, 3.4 million, which was approximately a quarter of
all NRIs around the world. Another 2.6 million were in Saudi Arabia and
Kuwait, Oman, Qatar and Bahrain were home to another 2.9 million NRIs.
Between them, they sent home nearly half of India’s total foreign remittances
of US 80 billion.
The World Bank, back in October, had projected a 9% decline in foreign
remittances to India due to the Covid-induced restrictions and disruption in
economic activity across the world.
Officials said India is working closely with UAE which stopped giving work and
visit visas for nationals from 12 countries including Prime Minister Imran
Khan’s Pakistan, seen as a fallout of Islamabad trying to challenge Saudi
Arabia’s leadership of the Muslim world and its stand against the UAE’s peace
deal with Israel that paved the way for UAE-Israel relations. According to a
report in the Nikkei Asian Review over the past week, many of the job
opportunities that Pakistani workers are losing are going to Indian workers.
Indian officials said that UAE’s visa ban on Pakistan was just one aspect of
Islamabad’s growing diplomatic isolation. Pakistan’s embarrassing moments when
its request for a side event on Kashmir was turned down at the recent
Organisation of Islamic Cooperation foreign ministers meet was another.
Messaged HE @DrSJaishankar, India's Foreign Minister to say thanks on behalf of 🇲🇾 Malaysian smallholders! India has announced a 10% reduction of basic customs duty on crude palm oil to 27.5%. This could further ⬆️ Malaysia's #PalmOil exports to 🇮🇳 which in turn could ⬆️ prices! pic.twitter.com/9mBY9Pds1E
— Hishammuddin Hussein 🇲🇾 (@HishammuddinH2O) November 28, 2020
Indian officials also cite a change in Malaysia’s approach towards South Asia
after Mahathir Mohamad’s exit. There are clear indications that Malaysia is
looking at its relationship with India from a broader perspective. This change
led New Delhi to reduce the duty on palm oil last month, prompting Malaysian
foreign minister Hishammuddin bin Tun Hussein to tweet his thank you note to
foreign minister Jaishankar.
Or when defence minister Rajnath Singh and foreign minister S Jaishankar, were
planning to make a transit halt in Iran on their way to the Shanghai
Cooperation Organisation meeting in Russia this September, Tehran requested
for meetings with the Indian leaders and turned the halt into a bilateral
visit. It was during these meetings that Iran indicated that it was keen to
restore its energy relationship with India and it emerged that New Delhi and
Tehran were on the same page as far as Afghanistan is concerned.
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