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SPEECHES
/ STATEMENTS
PM´s address at the Plenary
Session of the IBSA Summit
April 15, 2010, Brasilia
I am delighted to be in Brasilia for the Fourth Summit
meeting of IBSA. I express my deep appreciation to His
Excellency President Lula da Silva, and to the Government
and the people of Brazil for the excellent arrangements
made for hosting this Summit.
We deeply value the contribution made by President
Lula in imparting vigour and dynamism to IBSA. I also
take this opportunity to welcome President Jacob Zuma
to his first IBSA Summit. I am confident that IBSA will
immensely benefit from his guidance and leadership.
President Lula, President Zuma and I have just completed
a very useful exchange of views on several global issues
of mutual concern and the future direction to our trilateral
cooperation.
The IBSA Forum provides a framework of cooperation
among three major democracies from three different continents.
We are all developing economies with shared values and
similar aspirations. There is a lot that we can do together
to benefit each other, and the world.
We have made a conscious effort to ensure that our
interaction goes beyond just the Government level. The
IBSA framework is unique because of its focus on people
to people contacts. Strengthening of dialogue among
civil society and the promotion of sporting links and
tourism is an important dimension of IBSA activities.
The dialogue over the past three days in the Parliamentarian,
Business, Womens, Editors', Small Business, Local Government
and Academic Fora is a clear testimony of our commitment
to building bonds of friendship and understanding among
our people.
At the inter-governmental level, we cooperate on a
wide range of issues. Our Foreign and Trade Ministers
meet regularly. The sixteen Working Groups in different
sectors provide a framework for our cooperation. There
has been considerable progress in the areas of science
and technology and energy cooperation. We have expanded
our cooperation to ocean research, space science, and
the Antarctica. The three countries have participated
in a joint naval exercise, IBSAMAR. The second exercise
will take place in South Africa later this year.
Under the IBSA Trust Fund, we are committed to assisting
other developing countries through development projects.
This is a novel concept of South-South Cooperation.
We have decided to expedite negotiations on India-SACU-Mercosur
trade arrangement. This trilateral arrangement will
bring together a rapidly growing market and enable us
to benefit from our respective strengths and complementarities.
We are increasingly consulting each other on international
issues. IBSA can contribute to the shaping of the global
agenda and highlighting the issues of concern to developing
countries. We are united in our objective to ensure
a fair and equitable international order.
The critical phase of the global economic crisis is
behind us, but the process of recovery is still fragile
and uneven. We have to ensure that we do not repeat
the mistakes of the past. Global economic recovery,
to be sustainable, must be anchored in the real economy.
The financial sector and international capital flows
should contribute to economic growth rather than encourage
speculation and volatility in the international system.
Our focus should be on greater investments in infrastructure,
human capital, education and inclusive growth. We must
create new sources of growth.
Food security is an important goal for all of us. I
am pleased to note that we would be adopting documents
on a social development strategy and future agriculture
cooperation within the IBSA framework.
IBSA should coordinate its positions in the G-20. We
should continue to pursue the early conclusion of the
Doha round of trade negotiations because a fair and
rule based multilateral trading system is in our interest.
IBSA countries have been in the forefront of demands
for greater market access to the developed markets.
We must speak out against protectionist policies which
are only short-sighted and self-defeating in the long
run. The systems of global governance have not kept
pace with the changing realities of the world. There
is an urgent need for reform of the United Nations,
including the Security Council, by making it more democratic
and representative. The commencement of text-based negotiations
in the United Nations in April is a positive development,
and has been possible due to the efforts of the G-4
and South Africa.
Our three countries have closely consulted each other
on climate change issues. The Copenhagen Accord was
made possible due to the efforts of the BASIC countries.
The Copenhagen Conference has decided by consensus to
continue multilateral negotiations on two parallel tracks
the Bali Action Plan and the Kyoto Protocol.
We look forward to the Cancun Conference to advance
our goals under the United Nations Framework Convention
on Climate Change.
Terrorism continues to pose a serious challenge to
our developmental goals. It is a scourge that needs
to be fought through collective international effort.
We should make all efforts for the early finalisation
of the Comprehensive Convention on International Terrorism
in the United Nations.
The collaborative activities within the IBSA framework
hold immense promise for our people. The Joint Declaration
and Agreements that we will be signing today will strengthen
the enabling institutional framework for cooperation.
The IBSA Forum supplements the excellent bilateral
relations we have with each other. The significance
of IBSA however transcends our bilateral ties. It symbolises
the desire of three great countries to overcome physical
distances and pool their material and intellectual resources
for a common cause. IBSA is a strong moral force in
todays unsettled world.
India looks forward to working closely with Brazil
and South Africa to take our cooperation to even greater
heights.
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