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SPEECHES
/ STATEMENTS
PM's speech to the Indian community
in Washington
November 25, 2009, Washington DC
I am truly pleased to be here with you this evening
and appreciate your warm welcome. I thank you for coming
here from across the continent as representatives of
a dynamic and creative community of Indian Americans.
I have had a fruitful and most stimulating visit to
Washington DC. In my meetings with President Obama we
resolved to further strengthen our bilateral relations
and to work together as partners in a changing world.
My wife and I have been truly touched by the warmth
and generosity of the First Lady and President. I have
invited them to visit India and I am delighted that
he has accepted the invitation.
There were times in the past when the perspectives
and priorities of our two countries were different.
This often obscured the commonality of values and interests.
Today things have changed. I wish to record our deep
appreciation for the enormous contribution your creativity,
your hard work, and your good citizenship have played
in bringing our two nations together.
We also value the contribution you have been making
to Indias progress and modernization.
India is on the march. While the global slowdown has
hurt us too, we have been able to catch our breath and
move forward. With a gross savings ratio of over 35
per cent of national income, and a gross investment
ratio that is almost close to 40 per cent, we now have
the economic pre-conditions for sustained high growth.
Growth brings with it new challenges and new opportunities.
We need a better education system. We need a better
health care system. We need investment in education
and health care. We need modern infrastructure. It is
through the application of modern science and technology
that we hope to march forward.
More than the resources, however, we will require imagination
and innovation to succeed. People of Indian origin worldwide
can contribute mightily to this effort. In the past
few years we have already experienced what has been
called a reverse brain-drain. I would prefer
to call this brain gain or, indeed, a meeting
of minds.
We have tried to encourage this flow by making it easier
for Indian and American scholars, scientists, business
leaders and other professionals to work together. Let
me take this opportunity to extend an invitation to
all Indian Americans and non-resident Indians who wish
to return home to India in one capacity or another.
You no longer have to make a choice between here and
there. Modern technology and our flexible policies have
opened possibilities of working in both places.
I want to see a true intellectual and business partnership
between Indians and Americans in years to come. We are
similar in so many ways. We are both free and open societies.
We are both plural, multi-ethnic, multi-racial and multi-religious
societies. Metaphors like salad bowl, melting pot and
the rainbow have been used to describe both our societies.
We are constantly dealing with issues like coalition
building, dealing with civil society organizations,
non-governmental activism and the free consumer
of goods and ideas.
This is what makes it easy for Indians to adapt themselves
to the US and, dare I say, for Americans to adapt themselves
to India. I hope you will be the bridge that will continue
to connect our two nations and societies.
Relations with the United States will remain one of
the important pillars of our foreign policy. We see
the United States as an important partner for meeting
our national development goals and in creating a global
environment marked by consensus, co-existence and cooperation.
Our relationship is not born out of a crisis or any
one concern; nor does it exist in the context of any
other relationship. It is nurtured by our shared values;
and the bonds and mutual respect that exist between
the people of our two democratic and pluralistic societies.
It derives its vitality from recognition of the enormous
potential for mutually beneficial cooperation and a
sense of shared responsibility to work towards addressing
global challenges.
For these reasons, our agenda of bilateral cooperation
is extremely wide-ranging. We are encouraged by the
fact that we have made progress across the board in
our shared objectives of making our economies more prosperous,
our people and our world safer and our planet greener.
Today, on the eve of the first anniversary of the Mumbai
attack, I would especially like to thank the United
States for the support we received in the investigations
and for our enhanced cooperation in the area of counter-terrorism.
This is just one example of how we are working together
to make our people more secure.
President Obama and I met at a time when our relationship
has matured into a strong strategic partnership of global
dimension. This is a time of economic uncertainty and
security challenges, but it is also a time of opportunity.
There is a greater global awareness of the challenges
and the need for stronger resolve to address them. We
had extremely good discussions on a wide range of bilateral,
regional and global issues. This was our first detailed
discussion in a bilateral setting. I found in him a
great deal of respect for India and its values, and
a strong commitment to this relationship.
We have, I believe, laid the foundation for consolidating
the gains in our relationship. We are establishing new
directions in the next phase of our relationship that
will enable us to meet the challenges of the 21st century.
Our relationship will see a new emphasis on five Es
economy, energy, environment, education and empowerment
even as we further strengthen our ties in defence,
security and counter-terrorism. We will also harness
our natural synergies in science and technology, education
and research to advance food security, improve healthcare,
develop green technologies and create the human resources
for the future.
It is through the example of your family life, your
good neighbourliness, your enterprise and your contribution
to knowledge and commerce that you have given the land
of your ancestors a new identity in the new world. We,
at home in India, value that.
I thank you once again for coming here today. I know
that many of you have traveled from far in a holiday
week. I extend to you and your families good wishes
for the Thanksgiving.
Thank you.
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