Zürcher Nachrichten - UK PM arrives in India for hard sell on anti-Russia action

EUR -
AED 3.766568
AFN 72.914596
ALL 97.781164
AMD 406.953016
ANG 1.848117
AOA 935.240708
ARS 1062.018828
AUD 1.66908
AWG 1.848433
AZN 1.747392
BAM 1.946712
BBD 2.070496
BDT 125.084856
BGN 1.957145
BHD 0.386572
BIF 3033.446266
BMD 1.025483
BND 1.402462
BOB 7.085476
BRL 6.280229
BSD 1.025493
BTN 88.251905
BWP 14.432751
BYN 3.355896
BYR 20099.463259
BZD 2.059845
CAD 1.489201
CDF 2943.136063
CHF 0.93984
CLF 0.037515
CLP 1035.163783
CNY 7.519562
CNH 7.551092
COP 4455.979221
CRC 517.623998
CUC 1.025483
CUP 27.175295
CVE 109.754248
CZK 25.104029
DJF 182.24921
DKK 7.467262
DOP 62.951042
DZD 139.334285
EGP 51.791557
ERN 15.382242
ETB 128.678041
FJD 2.398301
FKP 0.812164
GBP 0.840043
GEL 2.89703
GGP 0.812164
GHS 15.12557
GIP 0.812164
GMD 73.325971
GNF 8866.522649
GTQ 7.912983
GYD 214.545193
HKD 7.988255
HNL 26.079291
HRK 7.355692
HTG 133.963772
HUF 413.762205
IDR 16732.956986
ILS 3.778509
IMP 0.812164
INR 88.391954
IQD 1343.333817
IRR 43160.012072
ISK 144.839589
JEP 0.812164
JMD 160.7894
JOD 0.727482
JPY 161.713554
KES 132.728636
KGS 89.217365
KHR 4144.973704
KMF 490.232455
KPW 922.933964
KRW 1511.689901
KWD 0.316366
KYD 0.854577
KZT 541.195798
LAK 22375.292726
LBP 91829.583004
LKR 302.054362
LRD 191.759782
LSL 19.487836
LTL 3.027985
LVL 0.620305
LYD 5.068537
MAD 10.305841
MDL 19.166024
MGA 4855.71127
MKD 61.514971
MMK 3330.728196
MNT 3484.590487
MOP 8.223353
MRU 40.922963
MUR 48.023749
MVR 15.796269
MWK 1778.137975
MXN 21.24606
MYR 4.611088
MZN 65.532176
NAD 19.489539
NGN 1591.006216
NIO 37.73385
NOK 11.76824
NPR 141.202164
NZD 1.844062
OMR 0.394366
PAB 1.025493
PEN 3.858488
PGK 4.11087
PHP 60.512755
PKR 285.571367
PLN 4.269649
PYG 8052.039455
QAR 3.738249
RON 4.980877
RSD 117.193241
RUB 104.230108
RWF 1426.452286
SAR 3.849445
SBD 8.65448
SCR 14.727599
SDG 616.315522
SEK 11.508587
SGD 1.405326
SHP 0.812164
SLE 23.330115
SLL 21503.865086
SOS 586.010091
SRD 35.999613
STD 21225.423919
SVC 8.972029
SYP 2576.556598
SZL 19.485557
THB 35.613006
TJS 11.187746
TMT 3.58919
TND 3.291435
TOP 2.401787
TRY 36.315119
TTD 6.961047
TWD 33.955073
TZS 2567.25936
UAH 43.363404
UGX 3791.595782
USD 1.025483
UYU 44.771651
UZS 13286.171552
VES 55.18254
VND 26016.499127
VUV 121.747374
WST 2.833191
XAF 652.959778
XAG 0.033731
XAU 0.000381
XCD 2.771419
XDR 0.789675
XOF 652.918582
XPF 119.331742
YER 255.601965
ZAR 19.595798
ZMK 9230.579631
ZMW 28.327969
ZWL 330.205049
  • RBGPF

    60.4900

    60.49

    +100%

  • SCS

    -0.3300

    10.97

    -3.01%

  • CMSC

    -0.1800

    22.92

    -0.79%

  • BCE

    -0.6700

    22.96

    -2.92%

  • RIO

    0.2100

    58.84

    +0.36%

  • BTI

    -0.8400

    35.9

    -2.34%

  • AZN

    0.4300

    67.01

    +0.64%

  • BCC

    -1.5200

    115.88

    -1.31%

  • NGG

    -1.8500

    56.13

    -3.3%

  • GSK

    -0.6600

    33.09

    -1.99%

  • RELX

    -0.4000

    46.37

    -0.86%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0300

    7.07

    -0.42%

  • VOD

    -0.1600

    8.05

    -1.99%

  • BP

    0.1700

    31.29

    +0.54%

  • JRI

    -0.1400

    12.08

    -1.16%

  • CMSD

    -0.1500

    23.25

    -0.65%

UK PM arrives in India for hard sell on anti-Russia action

UK PM arrives in India for hard sell on anti-Russia action

UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson arrived in India Thursday touting job-creating investment but facing long odds to get his reluctant counterpart Narendra Modi to back Western action against Russia.

Text size:

Johnson arrived in Gujarat -- Modi's home state and the ancestral home to half of the United Kingdom's British Indians -- where he is meeting business leaders and taking a cultural tour of the historic Ahmedabad city.

He will leave for New Delhi to meet his Indian counterpart on Friday, providing Johnson some respite from the "partygate" controversy over his criminal violation of pandemic lockdown rules.

Johnson will miss a parliamentary vote on Thursday into whether he deliberately misled the House of Commons in previously denying any Downing Street rule-breaking -- normally a resigning matter.

The India trip has been twice postponed because of Covid-19 flare-ups in each country, and was briefly in doubt again this week when the vote was announced, with opposition leaders insisting Johnson stand down.

But UK sources said it was seen as too important to put off again. Downing Street said it would seal two-way investment deals worth more than £1 billion ($1.3 billion), creating almost 11,000 jobs in Britain.

"What we're focusing on today is the incredible opportunities to deepen this partnership," Johnson told reporters while visiting a factory in Gujarat.

Johnson's visit began with a trip to Sabarmati ashram, once the home of independence hero Mahatma Gandhi, where he was invited to sit cross-legged and work a wooden spinning wheel.

The tool was once vital to the local textile industry and championed by Gandhi as a symbol of resistance to Britain's colonial rule of India.

- No lectures -

Downing Street said the visit would yield new partnerships on defence, artificial intelligence and green energy, along with investment deals in areas including robotics, electric vehicles and satellite launches.

But London acknowledges that it is some way off clinching a post-Brexit trade deal with Modi's government, which wants more visas for Indians to work or study in the UK.

India meanwhile has refused openly to condemn the Kremlin for its invasion of Ukraine, reliant as it is on Russian imports of energy, agricultural goods and military hardware.

"India and Russia have historically a very different relationship, perhaps than Russia and the UK have had over the last couple of decades," Johnson said.

"We have to reflect that reality, but clearly I'll be talking about it to Narendra Modi."

Foreign Secretary Liz Truss came away from New Delhi empty-handed last month when she pressed the Indians to do more against Russia, and Modi has also given short shrift to appeals from US President Joe Biden.

Johnson will tout the benefits of India moving more quickly towards renewables -- a pertinent strategic issue as countries attempt to pivot away from Russian energy.

"Both our countries are excessively reliant on foreign hydrocarbons. And we need to move away from that together," Johnson said.

"One of the things that we're talking about is what we can do to build partnerships on hydrogen, on electric vehicles, on offshore wind, on all the ways that you can reduce the cost of energy for people with green technology."

 

The UK also has a sizeable Sikh community, and its leaders have been demanding that Johnson raise the case of Scotsman Jagtar Singh Johal, who has been detained without trial in India for more than four years.

O.Krasniqi--NZN