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Express News Service

NEW DELHI: With India’s trade and investments across the African continent increasing, a Pan-Africa Free Trade Agreement is in the making, said External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar.

“If I take all of Africa today, India’s trade is $98 billion with Africa. India’s investments are $75 billion, and we are expecting both this trade with Africa and investments in Africa to grow, so there is a pan-African continental free trade arrangement in the making. As it unfolds, I think it makes it easier to both trade with Africa and invest in Africa,” said Jaishankar, while addressing the Indian diaspora in Tanzania.

It may be recalled that less than a month back, Commerce Minister Piyush Goyal, after interacting with 15 Ambassadors from the African region on trade and investment had said that India was open to an FTA with Africa as a whole or with individual countries.

“India and Africa share a remarkable friendship across decades ad have the potential of becoming the powerhouse of the future. India would act as a trusted partner to expand trade, commerce, business, investment and opportunities with Africa,” Goyal had said in June.

ALSO READ | For India, rise of Africa is key to geopolitical rebalancing: External Affairs Minister Jaishankar

Meanwhile, Africa is becoming the second-largest recipient of credit from India. Forty-two African nations have received about $32 billion which translates into a little less than 40 per cent of all credit extended by India during the last decade. India is trying to catch up with China which has a deep imprint across Africa primarily through its Belt and Road Initiative (BRI).

India finds a unified market in Africa but this still requires points of entry and regional hubs. That is why it is important for India to be connected with countries within Africa individually too.                                                                                 

“Within the unified market, there would be a differentiated level of, I would say, a governance and governance quality and investment friendliness. And that is where, I would say, Tanzania is very important. Because from an Indian perspective, when we look at Africa, for us, Africa, first of all, means East Africa, because this is the Africa with which we have a historical familiarity…where, again, the diaspora is strong. So even as Africa as a continent really lowers its internal barriers, for us, the case to be in Tanzania and to work with Tanzania becomes that much stronger,” said Jaishankar, while speaking to the diaspora in Tanzania.

India has just signed a Memorandum of Understanding for establishing the first IIT campus in Zanzibar.

“The IIT is an investment in the capacities of Tanzania, but we expect this not just to be a Tanzanian institution, we expect it actually to be a magnet for all of Africa and really emerge as a pan-African institution of education and technological excellence. I am very glad that it’s located in Zanzibar, because that is a natural confluence, that’s a meeting point really between India and Africa,” Jaishankar added.

NEW DELHI: With India’s trade and investments across the African continent increasing, a Pan-Africa Free Trade Agreement is in the making, said External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar.

“If I take all of Africa today, India’s trade is $98 billion with Africa. India’s investments are $75 billion, and we are expecting both this trade with Africa and investments in Africa to grow, so there is a pan-African continental free trade arrangement in the making. As it unfolds, I think it makes it easier to both trade with Africa and invest in Africa,” said Jaishankar, while addressing the Indian diaspora in Tanzania.

It may be recalled that less than a month back, Commerce Minister Piyush Goyal, after interacting with 15 Ambassadors from the African region on trade and investment had said that India was open to an FTA with Africa as a whole or with individual countries.googletag.cmd.push(function() {googletag.display(‘div-gpt-ad-8052921-2’); });

“India and Africa share a remarkable friendship across decades ad have the potential of becoming the powerhouse of the future. India would act as a trusted partner to expand trade, commerce, business, investment and opportunities with Africa,” Goyal had said in June.

ALSO READ | For India, rise of Africa is key to geopolitical rebalancing: External Affairs Minister Jaishankar

Meanwhile, Africa is becoming the second-largest recipient of credit from India. Forty-two African nations have received about $32 billion which translates into a little less than 40 per cent of all credit extended by India during the last decade. India is trying to catch up with China which has a deep imprint across Africa primarily through its Belt and Road Initiative (BRI).

India finds a unified market in Africa but this still requires points of entry and regional hubs. That is why it is important for India to be connected with countries within Africa individually too.                                                                                 

“Within the unified market, there would be a differentiated level of, I would say, a governance and governance quality and investment friendliness. And that is where, I would say, Tanzania is very important. Because from an Indian perspective, when we look at Africa, for us, Africa, first of all, means East Africa, because this is the Africa with which we have a historical familiarity…where, again, the diaspora is strong. So even as Africa as a continent really lowers its internal barriers, for us, the case to be in Tanzania and to work with Tanzania becomes that much stronger,” said Jaishankar, while speaking to the diaspora in Tanzania.

India has just signed a Memorandum of Understanding for establishing the first IIT campus in Zanzibar.

“The IIT is an investment in the capacities of Tanzania, but we expect this not just to be a Tanzanian institution, we expect it actually to be a magnet for all of Africa and really emerge as a pan-African institution of education and technological excellence. I am very glad that it’s located in Zanzibar, because that is a natural confluence, that’s a meeting point really between India and Africa,” Jaishankar added.

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