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Turkish President Erdogan to visit India in May, 2017

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New Delhi gets ready to welcome Turkish President
21THPRIYAERDOGAN

Suhasini Haidar
NEW DELHI
UPDATED: 22 MARCH 2017 01:34 IST

Erdogan’s visit in May will be significant both for its timing and impact on bilateral relations, say officials

Close on the heels of a series of big visitors, New Delhi is preparing to welcome Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan in the first week of May for a visit that will be significant both for its timing and impact on bilateral ties, MEA and Turkish officials confirmed to The Hindu.

The Turkish President is expected to travel to Delhi with a large entourage of ministers, officials said, for his first visit to India since 2008. In 2015, Mr. Erdogan had to put off his plans to travel to India after a series of large protests in his country.

‘Long overdue’
“This visit was long overdue, and we have been preparing for it for sometime, ever since it had to be put off in August 2015,” a Turkish diplomat said, adding that President Erdogan and Prime Minister Narendra Modi share a “good relationship”, having met twice already, including once in Turkey for the G-20 summit.

Officials also confirmed that the new Turkish Ambassador to India Sakir Ozkan Torunlar, who was earlier handling the India desk in the Turkish Foreign Ministry, will present his credentials to President Pranab Mukherjee on March 29 to facilitate protocol ahead of the visit.

Officials on both sides didn’t wish to speak about the expected outcomes of the Erdogan visit, as discussions are ongoing, but said they would broadly follow the “road map for cooperation” in various fields, including tourism and trade, which was signed by visiting Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu and External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj in Delhi last August.


NSG session
Mr. Erdogan’s visit will also come a month ahead of the Nuclear Suppliers Group plenary session where India will once again push its bid for membership. In June 2016, Turkey had backed a “process-based” approach for inducting members, and was understood to have wanted both Pakistan and India to be considered together. Turkey’s close ties with Pakistan, including a strategic partnership between them, have led to the two countries aligning themselves on several issues. During a visit to Islamabad in November 2016, President Erdogan had said that events in Kashmir “continue to hurt our conscience,” in a reference to violence in the Valley as he addressed a joint session of the Pakistan Parliament, while Foreign Minister Mr. Cavusoglu said “Turkey fully supports Pakistan’s position on Jammu and Kashmir.”

Turkey is also a member of the Uniting for Consensus group of countries that oppose U.N. Security Council Memberships to be increased, another source of friction between the two countries, where India would like to see some flexibility.

No response from MEA
On its part, Turkey will hope for an endorsement for recent government moves and a crackdown on dissidents that have drawn international criticism, especially after the failed coup in July 2016. Former Turkish Ambassador Burak Akcapar had publicly called on the Indian government to take action against India-based supporters of the man they allege was behind the coup, Fethullah Gulen. India will be among the first countries, if not the first to also welcome the Turkish President after what is being seen as a controversial referendum on April 16th which will turn Turkey from a parliamentary democracy to an executive presidency, abolish the Prime Minister’s post, give the president several new powers, and allow him two five-year terms after the next elections in 2019.

The MEA did not respond to requests for any comments on the visit or the planned referendum. As The Hindu has reported earlier, Mr. Erdogan’s visit in May will follow visits by Malaysian PM Najib Razak, Bangladesh PM Sheikh Hasina, and Australian PM Malcolm Turnbull in April.

http://www.thehindu.com/news/nation...welcome-turkish-president/article17566251.ece


 
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This is the reason behind his visit: http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/Turkey-wants-India-to-start-FTA-talks-soon/article16436657.ece

Thanks to the Europeans, we'll need a Free Trade Agreement in the future with India. Ironically, we need this deal to ensure that Indian companies can't export to Turkey without any limitation/duties/tariffs. In this special case, a FTA is needed to prevent Indian products from flooding the Turkish market.

These are very special circumstances because of the EU-Turkey customs union. Any deal between EU and India will affect Turkey directly. One hypothetical example: if the EU agrees to import Indian cars without any tariffs imposed, we in Turkey have to copy and implement this regulation in our trade with India. But conversely, the Indians aren't obliged to import Turkish cars without tariffs. They will be only bound to import EU cars without tariffs.

To avoid this, we need a FTA with India too. That's why he is coming to India.
 
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This is the reason behind his visit: http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/Turkey-wants-India-to-start-FTA-talks-soon/article16436657.ece

Thanks to the Europeans, we'll need a Free Trade Agreement in the future with India. Ironically, we need this deal to ensure that Indian companies can't export to Turkey without any limitation/duties/tariffs. In this special case, a FTA is needed to prevent Indian products from flooding the Turkish market.

These are very special circumstances because of the EU-Turkey customs union. Any deal between EU and India will affect Turkey directly. One hypothetical example: if the EU agrees to import Indian cars without any tariffs imposed, we in Turkey have to copy and implement this regulation in our trade with India. But conversely, the Indians aren't obliged to import Turkish cars without tariffs. They will be only bound to import EU cars without tariffs.

To avoid this, we need a FTA with India too. That's why he is coming to India.

So what you are saying is it's in India's best interests to ignore this attempt at FTA? If you've arrived at this conclusion the netas will have too.
 
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In FY’16, India-Turkey trade had shrunk nearly 28 per cent year-on-year to $4.91 billion, of which India’s exports to Turkey were $4.14 billion (contraction of 22.7 per cent), while Turkey’s exports to India fell 47 per cent to $776 million

Really surprised by these stats
 
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To avoid this, we need a FTA with India too. That's why he is coming to India.

We welcome it.

Indian - Turkey Trade has much potential to grow a lot...while respecting our internal producer concerns and addressing them.

Many of you like our Bajaj products it seems hehe:


In FY’16, India-Turkey trade had shrunk nearly 28 per cent year-on-year to $4.91 billion, of which India’s exports to Turkey were $4.14 billion (contraction of 22.7 per cent), while Turkey’s exports to India fell 47 per cent to $776 million

Really surprised by these stats

Comtrade has different figures/trends:

https://comtrade.un.org/data/
 
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This is the reason behind his visit: http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/Turkey-wants-India-to-start-FTA-talks-soon/article16436657.ece

Thanks to the Europeans, we'll need a Free Trade Agreement in the future with India. Ironically, we need this deal to ensure that Indian companies can't export to Turkey without any limitation/duties/tariffs. In this special case, a FTA is needed to prevent Indian products from flooding the Turkish market.

These are very special circumstances because of the EU-Turkey customs union. Any deal between EU and India will affect Turkey directly. One hypothetical example: if the EU agrees to import Indian cars without any tariffs imposed, we in Turkey have to copy and implement this regulation in our trade with India. But conversely, the Indians aren't obliged to import Turkish cars without tariffs. They will be only bound to import EU cars without tariffs.

To avoid this, we need a FTA with India too. That's why he is coming to India.

Just wondering, why India will agree for a deal which is not going to benifit us in economically?
 
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So what you are saying is it's in India's best interests to ignore this attempt at FTA? If you've arrived at this conclusion the netas will have too.
Generally speaking, yes. Your exports will grow, our exports will stagnate or even decline.
 
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Also India will never sign FTA with EU.They want India to fully import cars and spirits which is simply not acceptable to a large market

How much spirits and cars can India import ?? European cars are expensive
 
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How much spirits and cars can India import ?? European cars are expensive
Not all cars. Most of big names build relatively buyable vehicles if you go by indian upper & middle class. Then these companies will have no need to build them in India, they will just manufacture in Europe & sell it here.
 
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