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India vows $500m for Myanmar infrastructure

PakShah

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Central & South Asia
India vows $500m for Myanmar infrastructure
New Delhi praises Myanmar's recent steps towards democracy during President Thein Sein's official visit.

201110141470965580_20.jpg


Myanmar's President Thein Sein is on a four-day state visit to India [EPA]
India has promised Myanmar a $500m credit line to improve infrastructure after praising the country's steps towards democracy as it tentatively opens up after half a century of harsh military rule.

The money and warm words on Friday came as Myanmar President Thein Sein met Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh in New Delhi during a four-day state trip.

Myanmar has been on a campaign to shed its international pariah status.

The country recently launched economic reforms and eased limits on freedom of speech by relaxing censorship and unblocking banned websites.

It also freed several hundred political prisoners earlier this week, the latest sign of reforms in the poor and tightly controlled Southeast Asian country of 50 million people.

Thein Sein has surprised critics by signalling a series of political reforms since taking power in a controversial election last November, and has also held direct talks with pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi.

Expanding co-operation

On Friday, the leaders of both countries agreed to expand co-operation in oil and gas exploration, open up border trade and speed up the construction of natural gas pipelines.

They emphasised in a joint statement the need for energy security, and Myanmar agreed to encourage more Indian investments in its energy sector.

Private and state-owned Indian energy companies have already made substantial investments in Myanmar.

Myanmar has large undeveloped gas reserves and straddles busy Bay of Bengal shipping lanes, making it strategically important for energy-hungry emerging power neighbours India and China.

"The prime minister of India congratulated the president of Myanmar on the transition towards democratic government and offered all necessary assistance in further strengthening this democratic transition," they said in a joint statement.

International pressure

India has long weathered criticism from international partners for its accommodating stance to Myanmar.

New Delhi feels the signs of reform vindicate its policy of engagement.

India put aside concerns about human rights in the early 1990s for fear of losing access to oil and gas as China stepped in with military assistance and loans to help the country withstand sanctions.

The United States, Europe and Australia are unlikely to soften sanctions on Myanmar unless nearly 2,000 more political prisoners are released.

Other Asian countries, however, are keen to access resources in the mainly Buddhist nation.

The $500m credit line follows a similar $300m scheme last year. India buys most of Myanmar's agricultural exports and wants its neighbour to raise output further by planting on idle land.

Trade between India and Myanmar totalled $1.28bn last year. The two countries have set a modest target of $3bn by 2015.


http://english.aljazeera.net/news/asia/2011/10/2011101414106277411.html
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Well, India may have gotten this one, but India will not be able to beat China in Myanmar.
 
Well, India may have gotten this one, but India will not be able to beat China in Myanmar.

This is just the starting Kid, India belongs to the land of Chanakya, they not to be taught what politics is, its inbuilt in them. They lay low but they are silent killers. You never know what plotting they are doing for their hostile neighbors.:azn:
 
Well, India may have gotten this one, but India will not be able to beat China in Myanmar.

Okay, you people go on keeping the count.I am sure China gifts Pakistan a part of their revenue from other countries each time they attain market supremacy.

First it was US,now it is China.Don't you ever ask this question to yourself,that where do you stand?
 
Central & South Asia
India vows $500m for Myanmar infrastructure
New Delhi praises Myanmar's recent steps towards democracy during President Thein Sein's official visit.

201110141470965580_20.jpg


Myanmar's President Thein Sein is on a four-day state visit to India [EPA]
India has promised Myanmar a $500m credit line to improve infrastructure after praising the country's steps towards democracy as it tentatively opens up after half a century of harsh military rule.

The money and warm words on Friday came as Myanmar President Thein Sein met Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh in New Delhi during a four-day state trip.

Myanmar has been on a campaign to shed its international pariah status.

The country recently launched economic reforms and eased limits on freedom of speech by relaxing censorship and unblocking banned websites.

It also freed several hundred political prisoners earlier this week, the latest sign of reforms in the poor and tightly controlled Southeast Asian country of 50 million people.

Thein Sein has surprised critics by signalling a series of political reforms since taking power in a controversial election last November, and has also held direct talks with pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi.

Expanding co-operation

On Friday, the leaders of both countries agreed to expand co-operation in oil and gas exploration, open up border trade and speed up the construction of natural gas pipelines.

They emphasised in a joint statement the need for energy security, and Myanmar agreed to encourage more Indian investments in its energy sector.

Private and state-owned Indian energy companies have already made substantial investments in Myanmar.

Myanmar has large undeveloped gas reserves and straddles busy Bay of Bengal shipping lanes, making it strategically important for energy-hungry emerging power neighbours India and China.

"The prime minister of India congratulated the president of Myanmar on the transition towards democratic government and offered all necessary assistance in further strengthening this democratic transition," they said in a joint statement.

International pressure

India has long weathered criticism from international partners for its accommodating stance to Myanmar.

New Delhi feels the signs of reform vindicate its policy of engagement.

India put aside concerns about human rights in the early 1990s for fear of losing access to oil and gas as China stepped in with military assistance and loans to help the country withstand sanctions.

The United States, Europe and Australia are unlikely to soften sanctions on Myanmar unless nearly 2,000 more political prisoners are released.

Other Asian countries, however, are keen to access resources in the mainly Buddhist nation.

The $500m credit line follows a similar $300m scheme last year. India buys most of Myanmar's agricultural exports and wants its neighbour to raise output further by planting on idle land.

Trade between India and Myanmar totalled $1.28bn last year. The two countries have set a modest target of $3bn by 2015.


India vows $500m for Myanmar infrastructure - Central & South Asia - Al Jazeera English
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Well, India may have gotten this one, but India will not be able to beat China in Myanmar.

Bhai is commentary ki kya zarurat thee ??

Btw.....We are just securing our own Interests be it in vietnam, myanmar or any other nation in east asia :)
 
Well, India may have gotten this one, but India will not be able to beat China in Myanmar.

That's all you've got left to say since The only two rival firms in the business are them and us. Your knowledge in international relations is abysmally poor owing to the zero-sum perspective you keep on bilateral ties. It shows clearly.

---------- Post added at 07:39 PM ---------- Previous post was at 07:37 PM ----------

India is trying to drive a wedge between Myanmar and China.

Well now that you said it, convey this to Mr. Thein Sein as well.

Since when did you get so sympathetic to Burma? You don't even share a (the actual one) border with them.
 
Reforming Myanmar looks to India for enlightenment | Reuters

Two weeks ago, Thein Sein, a retired general who in February became Myanmar's first nominally civilian president in nearly 50 years, shocked Beijing by shelving a $3.6 billion dam project that would have supplied almost no domestic electricity and had come to epitomise the army's habit of kowtowing to China.

This week he visited India, the world's largest democracy, for a state visit that began with a pilgrimage to Bodh Gaya, the spot where the Buddha is said to have found enlightenment after meditating under a tree for three days and three nights.
 
Myanmar should not put its eggs in a single basket. India is very well capable of developing strategic relations with it. Increased Indian investment there would keep a check on Myanmar being used against Indian interests.

Hope soon the Myanmarese Govt stops letting Chinese use the great Cocos Island as a listening post against India. Now that would surely be a move in the right direction.
 
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