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SPEECHES
/ STATEMENTS
PMs
speech at the banquet for President Bush
March 02, 2006,
New Delhi
President Bush,
Madame First Lady, Ladies and Gentlemen,
I am delighted
to welcome you and your distinguished delegation to
India. We are pleased to have you in our midst.
It is our privilege
to return your warm hospitality at the White House.
The people of India have great regard and affection
for the American people, as they have had for centuries.
Ours has long been a two-way relationship. Long years
ago, the Father of our Nation, Mahatma Gandhi, acknowledged
the influence of Henry David Thoreau when he launched
a movement for civil disobedience against foreign rule.
In our own generation, a great son of the United States,
Martin Luther King, acknowledged the influence of Gandhiji,
when he launched a non-violent struggle for civil liberties
and racial equality.
Mr. President;
Close to half
a century ago President Eisenhower said on a visit to
India: We who are free and who prize our
freedom above all other gifts of God and nature
must know each other better; trust each other more;
support each other. Today those words have a new
resonance.Your people and ours have come to regard democracy
and peaceful political mobilization as legitimate and
civilised instruments of social change. Our passionate
commitment to democracy and human rights, our respect
for equality of all before the law and our regard for
freedom of speech and faith place us on the same side
of history.
Today, in India,
we are engaged in a Himalayan adventure of pursuing
development, improving the quality of life and modernizing
one of the worlds oldest civilizations. We seek
to provide a social and economic environment at home
that will unleash the creativity and enterprise of every
Indian, thus enabling our people to live a life of dignity,
fulfillment and self-respect. The United States has
long been a partner in our journey of progress. I am
therefore happy that on this visit you will renew an
old association between our countries in the field of
agriculture. Our farmers greatly benefited from American
help in the past, and they will now do so again through
the knowledge initiative that you will launch.
In India, we
admire the creativity and enterprise of the American
people, your excellent institutions, the openness of
your economy and your ready embrace of diversity. These
have attracted the brightest Indian minds, thereby creating
a bridge of understanding that transcends distance and
differences between us. Tomorrow, you will meet young
Indians who fuel the engines of our knowledge economy.
Your own country has made it possible for the talent
and abilities of our people to become more visible to
all.
Mr. President,
We seek a world
free of poverty, ignorance, disease and the threat of
terrorism. The United States and India must work together
in all possible forums to these ends. We must fight
terrorism wherever it exists, because terrorism anywhere
threatens democracy everywhere.
India seeks
a neighbourhood of peace and prosperity. Our sub-continent
of ours has been home to all the great religions of
the world. It is a powerhouse of human creativity, where
knowledge is worshipped as the gift of our creators.
With wisdom and farsightedness, we South Asians can
transform not just this region, but the whole world.
In our journey of modernization and development, social
change and empowerment, we see the United States as
a partner, a friend and a well-wisher.
In particular,
Mr. President, we see you as a true friend of India.
I have always been touched by your warm praise for India
and the Indian people. We sincerely acknowledge your
deep personal commitment to a closer economic and strategic
partnership between our two countries. Indeed, I recall
that at our very first meeting you paid tribute to our
efforts to achieve economic and social salvation in
the framework of an open society and an open economy.
I was deeply touched by your admiration for Indian democracy
and our commitment to pluralism and modernism.
We in India
greatly appreciate the firm stand you took against the
upsurge of protectionist forces in your country and
the farsighted approach you adopted on the issue of
outsourcing. In taking this stand you have not only
cemented closer relations between our two countries
but also helped America retain its edge in the global
market.
Madame First
Lady, my wife and I recall with gratitude your warm
hospitality at your home. You have a deep and abiding
interest in learning and education. I hope you will
return to India to spend time with our students and
teachers and discover a new India in the making. I am
truly sorry that the President is not taking you to
Taj Mahal this time! I hope he will be more chivalrous
the next time you are here!
I now request
you to join me in a toast:
To the continued
good health and happiness of the President and First
Lady;
To ever-lasting
friendship between our great nations.
Thank you.
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