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Vice President, Shri M. Hamid Ansari visits to Republic of Rwanda

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The Vice President, Shri M. Hamid Ansari addressing the media on board, Air India One Special Aircraft on his way to Rwanda on February 19, 2017. The Minister of State for Social Justice & Empowerment, Shri Vijay Sampla is also seen.
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The Vice President, Shri M. Hamid Ansari being received by the President of Senate of Rwanda, Mr. Mukuza Bernard, on his arrival, at the Kigali International Airport, in Kigali, Rwanda on February 19, 2017.
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The Vice President, Shri M. Hamid Ansari addressing the Indian community, in Kigali, Rwanda on February 19, 2017.
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The Vice President, Shri M. Hamid Ansari paying homage at the Kigali Genocide Memorial, in Kigali, Rwanda on February 20, 2017. The Minister of State for Social Justice & Empowerment, Shri Vijay Sampla and the Members of Parliament are also seen.
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The Vice President, Shri M. Hamid Ansari visiting the Museum at the Kigali Genocide Memorial, in Kigali, Rwanda on February 20, 2017. The Minister of State for Social Justice & Empowerment, Shri Vijay Sampla and the Members of Parliament are also seen.
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The Vice President, Shri M. Hamid Ansari signing the Visitor’s Book at the Kigali Genocide Memorial, in Kigali, Rwanda on February 20, 2017. The Minister of State for Social Justice & Empowerment, Shri Vijay Sampla and the Members of Parliament are also seen.
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The Vice President, Shri M. Hamid Ansari being received by the President of Senate of Rwanda, Mr. Mukuza Bernard, on his arrival at the Senate, in Kigali, Rwanda on February 20, 2017.

The Vice President, Shri M. Hamid Ansari meeting the
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President of Senate of Rwanda, Mr. Mukuza Bernard, in Kigali, Rwanda on February 20, 2017. The Minister of State for Social Justice & Empowerment, Shri Vijay Sampla and the Members of Parliament are also seen.
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The Vice President, Shri M. Hamid Ansari calling on the President of Rwanda, Mr. Paul Kagame, in Kigali, Rwanda on February 20, 2017.
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The Vice President, Shri M. Hamid Ansari with the President of Rwanda, Mr. Paul Kagame, in Kigali, Rwanda on February 20, 2017.
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The Vice President, Shri M. Hamid Ansari with the President of Rwanda, Mr. Paul Kagame, in Kigali, Rwanda on February 20, 2017. The Minister of State for Social Justice & Empowerment, Shri Vijay Sampla and the Members of Parliament are also seen.
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http://indianexpress.com/article/in...tributes-to-rwandan-genocide-victims-4534774/

Vice President Hamid Ansari on Monday paid tributes to the victims of the 1994 horrific Rwandan Genocide at a memorial which is the final resting place for more than 250,000 people who were massacred. The Vice President visited the Kigali Genocide Memorial this morning, a day after arriving in the capital on his five-day two-nation tour that will also take him to another East African country Uganda.

Ansari paid tribute to the victims of the horrendous tragedy by laying a wreath at the memorial site and also took a tour of the site, which, among other exhibits the skulls and belonging of several victims.

“He was received by the Director of the memorial and representatives of the Rwandan government and was guided at the site by the manager of the memorial,” a senior official said.

The site commemorates the mass slaughter of Tutsi in Rwanda by members of the Hutu majority government in 1994. The memorial was opened in 2004.

“In 1999, the City of Kigali provided land where a place of remembrance could be built and where victims of the genocide against the Tutsi could receive a dignified burial. Construction of the Kigali Genocide Memorial began in the same year and the process of burying victims began in 2001. Today the memorial serves as the final resting place for more than 250,000 victims of the genocide,” according to the memorial’s official website.

“The objective and the concept was to create a place to remember our beloved relatives and pay tributes and that people would understand the impact of what happened to never repeat it in the future,” according to an official who was associated with the memorial project.

Ansari is also scheduled to visit the Rwandan Senate where he will meet with President of the Senate Bernard Makuza and hold bilateral talks. He will later attend a luncheon hosted by the Rwandan government in his honour and also meet President Paul Kagame at the Presidential Palace.
 
Vice President's Secretariat
21-February, 2017 09:32 IST
India-Rwanda Innovation Growth Program to expand ties in Science, Technology and Innovation: Vice President

Addresses the India-Rwanda Business Forum

The Vice President of India, Shri M. Hamid Ansari has said that India-Rwanda Innovation Growth Program is being launched to expand ties in Science, Technology and Innovation, and the program aims at creating an ecosystem wherein Indian innovations and technology enterprises will thrive and encourage business ventures from both sides. He was addressing the India-Rwanda Business Forum organized jointly by the Federation of Indian Chamber of Commerce & Industry and the Rwanda Development Board in Kigali, Rwanda, today. The Prime Minister of Rwanda, Mr. Anastase Murekezi and other dignitaries were present on the occasion.


The Vice President said that Rwanda has put behind it the unfortunate genocide of 1994 and the efficient and clean city of Kigali captures the great strides that this country is taking on its path of growth and prosperity. He further said that Rwanda today offers a range of prospects to investors, including in renewable energy, infrastructure, agriculture, mining, tourism, and Information and Communications Technology. Trade between India and Rwanda has been gradually increasing over the last few years, he added.


The Vice President said that several Rwandans have travelled to India for medical treatment and have come back satisfied. India is also increasingly becoming a preferred destination for quality and affordable education for Rwandan students, he added.


The Vice President said that the translation of ideas and innovations into practical applications will require the 3 Ds of Discovery, Development and Delivery. We are now ready to work with our partners in Rwanda and other partners of Africa in transferring our experience in building an innovation driven economy, he added.


Following is the Text of Vice President's address:


" I convey my deep appreciation to the Hon’ble Prime Minister of Rwanda for his gracious presence here today. I also thank the Rwanda Development Board and the Private Sector Federation of Rwanda and the Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce & Industry (FICCI) for organizing this business event and for inviting me here.

It is an exciting prospect to see the captains of trade and industry from Rwanda stand alongside members of Indian business Community and innovators from various parts of India. This portends well for the future of Rwanda-India commercial and economic relations.

The efficient and clean city of Kigali, captures the great strides that this country is taking on its path of growth and prosperity. Rwanda has put behind it the unfortunate genocide of 1994 and has embarked on the path of economic development. Its economy has since made steady and considerable progress.

Rwanda today offers a range of prospects to foreign investors, including in renewable energy, infrastructure, agriculture, mining, tourism, and Information and Communications Technology. The spectacular growth story of Rwanda, a result of the prudence and vision of Rwandan leadership, represents the dynamism and opportunities of African continent. Rwanda offers a wonderful platform to Indian partners to enhance their presence and capacities in other parts of Africa.

Our bilateral relations are marked by cordiality, convergence of views and cooperation on major international issues. Bilateral trade and investments have shown a healthy rise. Trade between India and Rwanda has been gradually increasing over the last few years. Rwanda is also a beneficiary of the Duty Free Tariff Preference Scheme of the Government of India extended to Least Developed Countries. Rwanda can avail of this facility to increase their exports to India. In fact, one of the key elements of the joint declaration issued during the official visit of President Kagame to India last month was to double trade in the next five years.

India is also a preferred destination for affordable and quality health care for Rwandans. Several Rwandans have travelled to India for medical treatment and have come back satisfied. India is increasingly becoming a preferred destination for quality and affordable education for Rwandan students. Every year more than 500 student visas are issued to Rwandan nationals.

The Government of India also offers scholarships and fellowships to Rwandan students to enable them to pursue undergraduate, masters, post-graduate, and research courses in India under ITEC, ICCR, CV Raman Fellowship and Special Agricultural Scholarships. In addition to these, several short-term, fully-funded, training courses will be offerred to Rwandese nationals as part of the initiatives under the India –Africa Forum Summit.

India-Rwanda Innovation Growth Program is being launched to expand ties in Science, Technology and Innovation. After this Pilot project, the programme is proposed to be implemented in the East African Community in seven countries and will then be scaled to seven other economic zones across Africa. Under the Programme, 20 demonstrated and validated Indian technologies and innovations are expected to be adopted over a period of two years. The joint ventures created with Rwandan partners can deliver many sustainable social enterprises that will stimulate economic development in Rwanda. The program aims at creating an ecosystem wherein Indian innovations and technology enterprises will thrive and encourage business ventures from both sides.

The translation of ideas and innovations into practical applications will require the 3 Ds of Discovery, Development and Delivery. India has, over the years, developed certain expertise and skills in domains of low-capital intensive innovations. We are now ready to work with our partners in Rwanda and other partners of Africa in transferring our experience in building an innovation driven economy in Africa.

I wish the Business Meet and Innovation Exhibition a great success. I am confident that bilateral relations between the two countries will grow further with more frequent exchanges between businesspersons for mutual benefits.

Thank You.

***

The Vice President, Shri M. Hamid Ansari being received by the Prime Minister of Rwanda, Mr. Anastase Murekezi at the India-Rwanda Business Forum, in Kigali, Rwanda on February 20, 2017.
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The Vice President, Shri M. Hamid Ansari inaugurating the Exhibition at the India-Rwanda Business Forum, in Kigali, Rwanda on February 20, 2017. The Prime Minister of Rwanda, Mr. Anastase Murekezi and the Minister of State for Social Justice & Empowerment, Shri Vijay Sampla are also seen.
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The Vice President, Shri M. Hamid Ansari visiting the Exhibition at the India-Rwanda Business Forum, in Kigali, Rwanda on February 20, 2017. The Prime Minister of Rwanda, Mr. Anastase Murekezi and the Minister of State for Social Justice & Empowerment, Shri Vijay Sampla are also seen.
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The Vice President, Shri M. Hamid Ansari visiting the Exhibition at the India-Rwanda Business Forum, in Kigali, Rwanda on February 20, 2017. The Prime Minister of Rwanda, Mr. Anastase Murekezi and the Minister of State for Social Justice & Empowerment, Shri Vijay Sampla are also seen.
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The Vice President, Shri M. Hamid Ansari at the India-Rwanda Business Forum, in Kigali, Rwanda on February 20, 2017. The Prime Minister of Rwanda, Mr. Anastase Murekezi is also seen.
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The Vice President, Shri M. Hamid Ansari addressing the India-Rwanda Business Forum, in Kigali, Rwanda on February 20, 2017.
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The Vice President, Shri M. Hamid Ansari addressing the India-Rwanda Business Forum, in Kigali, Rwanda on February 20, 2017. The Prime Minister of Rwanda, Mr. Anastase Murekezi is also seen.
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The Vice President, Shri M. Hamid Ansari with the Business Delegates at the India-Rwanda Business Forum, in Kigali, Rwanda on February 20, 2017. The Prime Minister of Rwanda, Mr. Anastase Murekezi is also seen.
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http://zeenews.india.com/india/indi...vation-aviation-visa-requirement_1979539.html

Kigali: India and Rwanda have signed three agreements during the visit of Vice President Hamid Ansari to boost bilateral relations that include establishment of an entrepreneurship developement centre in Kigali.

According to the Memorandum of Understandings signed between Rwanda and India, Rwanda Air will soon begin services to India, and the two countries will mutually exempt visa requirements for diplomatic and official passport holders.

Rwandan Prime Minister Anastase Murekezi said the MoUs will boost economic and business ties with India.

"We have 54 years of fruitful bilateral relationship. Rwanda and India share important ties and we are committed to make this relationship grow stronger," Murekezi said.

Ansari, who is on a five-day tour to Rwanda and Uganda, earlier yesterday launched an innovation growth programme and addressed business leaders and experts from the two countries.

He said Rwanda offers a "wonderful platform" to Indian partners to enhance their presence in other parts of Africa and emphasised India was "ready to work" with partners in Rwanda and the larger African continent in "transferring our experience" in building an innovation-driven economy.

"India-Rwanda Innovation Growth Program is being launched to expand ties in science, Technology and Innovation. After this pilot project, the programme is proposed to be implemented in the East African community in seven countries and will then be scaled up to seven other economic zones across Africa," he said.

Under the programme, 20 Indian technologies and innovations are to be adopted over a period of two years.

"The programme aims at creating an ecosystem wherein Indian innovations and technology enterprises will thrive and encourage business ventures from both sides," Ansari said.

The vice president said it was an "exciting prospect" to see the captains of trade and industry from Rwanda stand alongside the Indian business community and innovators.

"This portends well for the future of Rwanda-India commercial and economic relations," he said.

Prime Minister Murekezi attended the event organised by Rwanda Development Board, the Private Sector Federation of Rwanda and the Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce & Industry (FICCI).


First Published: Tuesday, February 21, 2017 - 10:59
 
On Board the Vice-President’s Special Aircraft February 20, 2017 00:55 IST
Updated: February 20, 2017 03:40 IST
http://www.thehindu.com/news/nation...in-africa-outreach-ansari/article17330981.ece


“Our development partners decide where they want to use Indian knowledge and expertise”

Vice-President Hamid Ansari on Sunday differentiated between the relationship India and China have with Africa, en route Rwanda and Uganda on a four-day visit.

Speaking at a press conference on board the special aircraft, he stressed that a combined 12 visits to the continent by President Pranab Mukherjee, Prime Minister Narendra Modi and he, as part of India’s outreach to strengthen relations between India and the African states since 2015 (following the India-Africa Summit in New Delhi), showed stylistically different ties from those of other countries, including China.

“We are not in competition with China or anybody else as far as our development cooperation with foreign countries especially Africa is concerned. They have their own style of work, they have their own capacities, which are different from us. We have left it to our development partners in Africa, and they decide where they want to use Indian knowledge and expertise. Once they do that, then we transform it into concrete projects of assistance. Of course, we have financial constraints, that goes without saying, but, the experience so far has been satisfactory,” he said.

To boost interaction
He said that his visit to the countries was “part of the conscious effort of the [Indian] government to strengthen our interaction with the countries of the African continent”.

“Today’s and day after tomorrow’s visit is part of that effort, because so far, central African states have not been touched,” he said. “The basic thing we play is to offer developmental assistance. The road that these countries have travelled is the road that we have travelled many many years ago. There is something that we can share with them. They look forward to it, to benefit from our experience and there are various areas of expertise in which Indian minds and Indian innovation can be of benefit to them,” he said.

He said that both Rwanda and Uganda had overcome great political difficulties in the past to emerge as important states in the continent. “Rwanda is a country that has, in living memory gone through some tough times of internecine warfare and genocide, and now have a growth rate that hovers at 8%, its economic policy is welcoming to business and in fact this is one of the places where we hope to further business ties,” he said.

On Uganda, Mr Ansari pointed out the fact that here too “the clock had turned 360 degrees” where under former rule Idi Amin, nearly 80,000 members of the Asian community had left the country, many have now returned and the country boasts an Indian diaspora of around 30,000 people. In both countries, Mr Ansari will be attending events hosted by the Indian diasporic community.

On his arrival in Rwanda, Mr. Ansari was received at the Kigali International Airport by President of the Senate Bernard Makuza.
 
Vice President's Secretariat
21-February, 2017 16:24 IST
Imperatives that drive African-Indian engagement are based on our shared challenges, common interests, and perceptions of mutual benefit: Vice President

Delivers Lecture at the University of Rwanda on ' Rwanda, India and Africa: Imperatives for Cooperation'

The Vice President of India, Shri M. Hamid Ansari has said that the imperatives of our shared history and cultural links; our complementary strengths and capacities that make us natural economic and commercial partners; our common approach in meeting development challenges towards building a sustainable future; our cooperation from a shared perspective on addressing peace and security related issues; and a convergence of views on matters global drive African-Indian engagement which based on our shared challenges, common interests, and perceptions of mutual benefit. He was delivering lecture at the University of Rwanda on 'Rwanda, India and Africa: Imperatives for Cooperation', in Kigali, Rwanda, today. The Minister of Education, Rwanda, Dr. Musafiri Papias Malimba and the Chancellor of the University of Rwanda, Dr Mike O’Neal were present on the occasion.




The Vice President said that the youth today would have the wisdom to avoid the follies and limitations of the past and look forward instead to a future for our world in which the operative principle would be cooperation rather than contention and the objective would be mutual benefit rather than selfish greed. He complimented the people of Rwanda on the impressive signs of development and progress evident everywhere and added that this has been possible due to the foresight and sagacious vision of the leadership and the hard work of the people. He further said that India sees itself as a strong development partner to Rwanda.


Quoting the Prime Minister, Shri Narendra Modi, the Vice President said that India and Africa had ‘a strong emotional link’ defined by our shared history of struggle against colonialism and our aspiration to bring prosperity to our people. Our approach has not been one of demanding privileges or rights to projects, but rather a desire to contribute to the achievement of Africa’s development objectives as they are established by Africans themselves, he added.


The Vice President said that India has also sought to develop innovative mechanisms such as our concessional Lines of Credit tailored to the requirements and capacities of our partners in Africa, so that they do not become another channel leading them into a debt trap. He further said that in a time when the global political and economic situation is marked by uncertainty and upheavals the need for developing economies to cooperate and consult in a new spirit of solidarity assumes renewed significance. The great potential in this relationship provides both India and our African partners an opportunity to benefit significantly from its enlargement, he added.


Following is the Text of Vice President's Lecture:


" I am happy to be here in this beautiful land and to have the opportunity to share some thought with the young people, who would shape the world of the future in their own chosen ways.

I say this in the confidence that your generation would have the wisdom to avoid the follies and limitations of the past and look forward instead to a future for our world in which the operative principle would be cooperation rather than contention and the objective would be mutual benefit rather than selfish greed.

My delegation and I bring to you the greetings and good wishes of the 1.3 billion people of India and particularly of the world’s largest number of youth, 328 million, who constitute 28 percent of our population and who, like young people everywhere, are anxious to build a better world.

Last month, we in India, had the privilege to welcome His Excellency President Paul Kagame as a special guest at the Vibrant Gujarat event. This gesture was instrumental in consolidating further our bilateral relationship.

I must compliment you on the impressive signs of development and progress that are evident everywhere. This, I understand, has been possible due to the foresight and sagacious vision of the leadership and the hard work of the people.

We in India see ourselves as a strong development partner to Rwanda. We are already cooperating in sectors such as solar electrification, food processing, skill development and hydropower projects.

During President Kagame’s recent visit an understanding has been reached for a new line of credit worth $ 80 million for a road project. We are also committed to continuing and enhancing the provision of scholarships for training of Rwandan civilians and defence personnel under various technical cooperation and cultural cooperation programmes.

Our bilateral trade has doubled over the last five years, but at US $ 106 million, remains modest and much below its potential. Rwanda has a dynamic economy and ranks highly in the ease of doing business, providing many incentives for investors. We share with Rwanda, this strong desire to provide stable democratic governance and opportunities for growth and prosperity of our people.

Yesterday, I had the pleasure of inaugurating, jointly with Prime Minister Murekezi, the Rwanda-India Business Forum that will bring together business partners from our two countries. We also inaugurated an exhibition that showcases some of the more useful and cost-effective innovations from Indian industry that can be adapted for use here.

On our part, we continue to encourage Indian companies to be bolder and more imaginative in seizing the opportunities that Rwanda presents.

The upsurge in India-Africa relations comes at a time when the world has acknowledged India’s growth story. The rapid growth of our economy over the last 25 years has provided India with additional resources, not only to augment its own developmental efforts, but also to collaborate with our partners in their developmental efforts across the world, and particularly in Africa.

It takes place at a time when Africa has cast-off its image of deprivation and hopelessness and has taken control of its own resources and destiny, as winds of progress, peace and participation sweep across this great continent. This new-found confidence and developmental zeal is best demonstrated by your own country whose economic performance has been termed ‘remarkable’ by the International Monetary Fund.

India’s engagement with Africa has its own unique script, based on what Prime Minister Narendra Modi has called, ‘a strong emotional link’ defined by our shared history of struggle against colonialism and our aspiration to bring prosperity to our people.

The imperatives that drive African-Indian engagement are based on our shared challenges, common interests, and perceptions of mutual benefit.

The first imperative comes from our shared history and cultural links. India owes an unforgettable debt of gratitude to Africa’s role in inspiring our struggle for national liberation. It was on this continent that Mahatma Gandhi developed and first practised the concepts of non-violence and peaceful resistance that won India its freedom.

Our present choices are informed by our shared experience of anti-colonial struggle against exploitation and racial discrimination. India, despite the constraints of its growing economy, was a forerunner in championing the interests of developing countries, including those from Africa, through initiatives such as the Bandung declaration of 1955, the Group of 77 and the Non-Aligned Movement.

In addition, a large number of people of Indian origin call Africa their home, a number of them being based in the Eastern and Southern parts of Africa. They contribute to the growth of local economy and provide a link between their adopted homes and their country of origin.

The second imperative comes from our complementary strengths and capacities that make us natural economic and commercial partners. India provides a long-term, stable and profitable market to the goods and services that Africa generates. For India, Africa has the potential to become a major contributor to our energy security and food security requirements. This is a ‘win-win’ situation.

India is increasingly an important source of investment for projects in Africa, which span diverse sectors such as pharmaceuticals, information technology and telecommunications, engineering, education, health and agriculture. Indian private sector has been a pioneer in making investments in Africa, contributing to generation of employment and growth in the countries receiving such investments.

The quantum of Indian investments in Africa has increased in recent years and is presently estimated to be about $ 35 billion, with a large part of it concentrated in Southern and Eastern Africa.

Agro business initiatives have been a crucial component in our commercial exchange. Indian successes in agriculture have taken place in the context of low capital intensive farming and varied climatic conditions, which can be of relevance to Africa. Furthermore, the growing middle-class in urban India can become a dependable consumer for African food processing industry.

In order to address the trade imbalance and diversify the trade basket, India has already offered duty-free access to Indian markets, with very few exceptions, for all the Least Developed Countries of Africa.

The third imperative comes from our common approach in meeting development challenges towards building a sustainable future for our people. The African leadership is aware of India’s domestic experience and success in developing a vibrant manufacturing and services sector, while encouraging inclusiveness at societal level.

While each country has its own unique development story, the answer to many issues confronting us in health and well-being, food security and nutrition, energy, climate change, water and sanitation lie perhaps in the mirror image that India and Africa present in terms of demography, disease burden and resource constraints; and how we have met these challenges through innovative solutions.

Africa and India can thus learn much from each other in terms of capacity building, program implementation and innovation.

Our development cooperation engagement with Africa is unique, based on mutual benefits while contributing to Africa’s development objectives through a consultative process. Our approach has not been one of demanding privileges or rights to projects, but rather a desire to contribute to the achievement of Africa’s development objectives as they are established by Africans themselves.

A wide range of areas have been covered including agriculture, small and medium enterprises, science and technology, health, education, culture, infrastructure, energy, communications, civil society and governance. Our partnership model is premised on human resource development and institution building in partner countries. This in turn, creates skills and capacities in Africa – particularly in sectors such as agriculture, food processing, textile and small industries-- and benefits expansion of their export to India and other countries.

India has also sought to develop innovative mechanisms for implementing these initiatives, such as our concessional Lines of Credit, which are tailored to the requirements and capacities of our partners in Africa, to ensure that they do not become another channel leading them into a debt trap.

To support our development cooperation in Africa, the Government of India has announced concessional credit of over $ 10 billion, over a period of next five years, in addition to the ongoing credit lines. A grant assistance of $ 600 million has also been announced, including $ 100 million for the India Africa Development Fund and $ 10 million for the India Africa Health Fund.

The grant assistance will also cover more than 50,000 scholarships for African students in India over the next five years.

The fourth imperative for our cooperation comes from a shared perspective on addressing peace and security related issues and a convergence of views on matters global. We share similar views and positions on a variety of global concerns, ranging from combating terrorism and piracy to coordinating our positions in global forums over issues such as reforms at the United Nations, world trade and climate change. The reform of political, security and economic institutions of global governance has been a key area of such cooperation, with both Africa and India underlining the urgency of undertaking such reforms, including a meaningful expansion of the United Nations Security Council.

The threat of terrorism has emerged as a major impediment in our quest for peace and prosperity for our people. The spreading tide of terrorism and extremism is a threat that all civilised societies face today. In India we face the threat from across our borders. Terrorist action and violence cannot be justified on any grounds. We condemn terrorism in all its forms and manifestations and call for strong and concerted international efforts to deal with this menace in a comprehensive manner.

India also remains committed to ensuring stability and peace in Africa under a genuine multilateral effort led by United Nations. In pursuance of this commitment, India has over 6000 personnel committed to UN peacekeeping duties in Africa. In addition, we have worked bilaterally with our African partners to enhance defence training and capacity building in security domains.

In a time when the global political and economic situation is marked by uncertainty and upheavals threaten the stability of the global order, the need for developing economies, which seek stability, peace and prosperity for their people, to cooperate and consult each other in a new spirit of solidarity assumes renewed significance.

India’s commitment to developing a strong partnership with Africa is reflected in our recent initiatives, particularly under the rubric of the India Africa Forum Summit, whose third edition was held in New Delhi in 2015 with participation from 54 African countries.

The Forum provided an opportunity for the African leaders to explore what India offered to them. The outcome document of the summit –“Delhi Declaration” and “Framework for Strategic Partnership”- reflected the common positions of India and Africa on a wide array of political and economic issues as well as an articulation of our joint commitment to deepening our mutual cooperation.

The meeting provided a new direction to Africa- India relations based on equality, mutual respect and shared gains in addition to identifying broad areas of cooperation in political, economic and social development.

These developments are but a start. Our relations are a long way from reaching the peak. The great potential, therefore, in this relationship provides both India and our African partners, an opportunity to benefit significantly from its enlargement.

Long Live India-Africa Amity

Long Live India-Rwanda Friendship

Thank You."


***

The Vice President, Shri M. Hamid Ansari being received by the Minister of Education, Rwanda, Dr. Musafiri Papias Malimba, at the University of Rwanda, Kigali, Rwanda on February 21, 2017.
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The Vice President, Shri M. Hamid Ansari signing the visitors book at the University of Rwanda, Kigali, Rwanda on February 21, 2017. The Minister of Education, Rwanda, Dr. Musafiri Papias Malimba is also seen.

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The Vice President, Shri M. Hamid Ansari at the University of Rwanda, Kigali, Rwanda on February 21, 2017. The Minister of Education, Rwanda, Dr. Musafiri Papias Malimba and the Chancellor of University of Rwanda, Dr. Mike O’Neal are also seen.
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The Vice President, Shri M. Hamid Ansari being bid farewell by the President of Senate of Rwanda, Mr. Mukuza Bernard, at Kigali International Airport, in Kigali, Rwanda on February 21, 2017.
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The Vice President, Shri M. Hamid Ansari and Smt. Salma Ansari depart from Kigali, Rwanda to Kampala, Uganda, for the second leg of their visit, on February 21, 2017.
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Vice President's Secretariat
24-February, 2017 20:00 IST
East African Community is becoming an Economical and Political reality

Addresses the Media onboard

The Vice President of India, Shri M. Hamid Ansari has said that the East African Community is taking shape as an Economical and Political Community and many of our programmes and initiatives in the region will no longer be purely bilateral but will have to be adapted to work for the entire community. He was addressing the Media Onboard Air India One aircraft while returning back from a 5-day visit to Rwanda and Uganda, today. The Minister of State for Social Justice & Empowerment, Shri Vijay Sampla and other dignitaries were present on the occasion.


The Vice President said that there had been a gap in high level visits to both of these countries and this visit filled that gap. He further said that the level of discussions in both the countries were extremely warm and cordial, adding that his meetings went beyond pro-forma. The meeting with the President of Uganda was substantive and productive and reinforced our long standing ties, he said.


The Vice President said that India's approach, as long standing friends, has been to give our African partners assistance in their developmental programmes in those areas where they want and it is them to convert that into specific requests. He further said that the broader issues of India's approach to cooperation with African Countries are well known and well appreciated. One issue of concern to both I diamond and Africa is scourge of terrorism and there was a total meeting of minds in condemning terrorism in all shapes and forms, he added.


The Vice President said that the visit of Kigali Genocide Memorial was a tribute to the determination of the people of Rwanda and that he was glad that they were able to overcome that heart-rending disaster and re-build their country.


Reacting to a question on trade imbalance, the Vice President said that there was trade imbalance with Uganda as India exports a lot of things to them and their export basket to India was presently limited. He further said that there are two ways to address this; one by increasing the products in their export basket and two; instead of exporting finished goods from India to Uganda, some Indian manufacturers could set up their manufacturing units in Uganda.


Responding to a question on Parliamentary cooperation with both countries, the Vice President said that there is a need for having more Parliamentary interactions. He further said that a Parliamentary visit from Rwanda and Uganda will expose them to what is happening in India and witness our developmental programmes.


Reacting to a question on India sustaining engagements with Africa, the Vice President said that it was a part of Government's policy and that the India-Africa summit and various other initiatives make this evident. He further said that the sheer size of Africa with 54 countries and one billion people, create enormous chances of cooperation and of sharing our experience and skills which are useful to them. Africa also has enormous resources which can be useful as India's development requirements come up, he added.


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