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SPEECHES
/ STATEMENTS
PM's address at the Reception by
Japan-India Association and Japan-India Parliamentary
Friendship League
October 23, 2008, Tokyo
Thank you for your gracious words of welcome.
I am truly honoured by the generous hospitality of so
many friends of India. I am also happy to be in the
midst of my fellow citizens and people of Indian origin.
I deeply appreciate the presence of PM Mori and PM
Fukuda. That reflects the depth of India Japan relations.
I greatly appreciate the warm sentiments that have
been expressed towards India and towards me personally.
Let me assure you that the people of India deeply value
Japans friendship.
The Japan-India Association has been in the forefront
of promoting closer cultural and economic ties between
our two countries for over a century.
The visionary elder statesmen who established the Association
in 1903 were convinced that India and Japan would emerge
as two major pillars of the new Asia. It was thanks
to their efforts that partnership between India and
Japan grew in the early years, particularly in the economic
field.
Some of the greatest sons of India, the philosopher
Vivekananda, the renowned poet Rabindranath Tagore and
the industrial pioneer Jamshedji Tata, among others,
renewed our ancient ties with Japan in the modern era.
India's first Prime Minister, Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru,
visited Japan in the late 1950s and laid the foundation
of a new era of abiding friendship between the two Asian
democracies.
We are very grateful to Japan for the development assistance
provided to India, particularly for our industrial modernisation.
In the past sixty years, we have broadened and deepened
this relationship into a durable productive partnership.
In the next phase of our relationship, we seek to exploit
the opportunities offered by globalisation and by the
synergies in our economies to expand flows of trade,
technology, investment and people-to-people contacts.
Under the visionary leadership of former Prime Minister
Yoshiro Mori, a new chapter was opened in our ties following
his landmark visit to India in the year 2000. We are
very grateful and appreciative of the personal attention
that he has devoted to the rejuvenation and deepening
of our bilateral engagement.
I thank the Japan-India Parliamentary Friendship League,
and its President Mr. Taro Nakayama, for their important
role in building the broad based political consensus
that exists in both countries on strengthening India-Japan
ties.
The world is facing multiple challenges. The spectre
of recession in the global economy, coming as it does
in the wake of the steep rises of energy and food prices,
threatens to disrupt the rhythm of economic development
in many developing countries. Terrorism is a danger
to our peace-loving societies. Climate change and environmental
degradation also threaten our beautiful planet .
We look to the wise counsel and leadership of Japan
in rising to meet these challenges. We wish to draw
upon Japans vast developmental experience and
her traditional emphasis on consensus, harmony and balance
in solving these problems that threaten global peace
and prosperity.
I have been a frequent visitor to this beautiful country
since 1971. It has been my earnest desire, for the past
several decades, to see this relationship prosper and
grow. I am very happy to witness today the transformation
of India-Japan relations. It is truly developing into
a global and strategic partnership as envisaged when
PM Mori visited India in 2000.
On the strength of our strong bilateral relationship,
we stand as two major powers ready to play a commensurate
global role. India believes that a strong and dynamic
Japan is a powerful factor of peace and stability in
Asia and the world.
I commend the contribution of the Indian community
in Japan. They have built bridges of friendship and
understanding between our two people. Their achievements
have made India proud and we wish them well in their
adopted home.
I am confident that all of us gathered here today will
redouble our efforts to strengthen our bilateral relationship,
which is important for our two countries, for Asia and
for the world.
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