India is planning to invite Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi and step
up business ties with one of the Arab world's major powers, with which
it has had long-standing ties, when a high-profile Indian business
delegation heads to post-Mubarak Egypt next month.
More than a
year after the so-called Arab Spring, India is also looking to explore
new opportunities in post-Gaddafi Libya which is in the process of
renovating its society and polity after a messy war last year.
With
Egypt trying to reclaim its pre-eminent position in the Arab world,
India signalled its desire to build bridges with the Muslim Brotherhood
dispensation in Cairo when Prime Minister Manmohan Singh met Morsi
briefly on the sidelines of the NAM summit in Tehran Aug 30.
Official
sources told IANS that Manmohan Singh conveyed India's desire to build
further the strong foundations of bilateral ties and explore new areas
of cooperation.
The Manmohan-Morsi meeting took place barely days
after the Egyptian president made his first overseas visit outside the
Middle East to China. Beijing pledged a new $200 million credit and
declared its resolve to tighten strategic partnership with Cairo.
India
has taken note of the new regime's focus on Beijing as Morsi asserts
himself to distinguish from Hosni Mubarak's pro-US tilt to craft a new
Look East foreign policy which will focus on emerging Asian powers like
India and China.
Against this backdrop, India is planning to
invite the Egyptian president to India. Dates will be worked out soon,
said the sources.
"As Egypt completes its transition towards
democracy, we expect a substantial growth in our bilateral engagement,"
India's Ambassador to Egypt Navdeep Suri told IANS from Cairo.
"Leading
figures in the new government have given clear indications of their
desire to deepen Egypt's economic engagement, with India as part of
their own Look East policy. We are pro-actively engaged with all key
actors in government, trade and industry to facilitate this process," he
said.
India's globally ambitious corporate sector has also smelt
the coffee and is determined not to miss out on fresh opportunities
emerging in Egypt, whose strategic location makes it a bridge between
Africa, Asia and Europe.
An industry source told IANS that a
high-profile delegation of CEOs of Indian companies, led by Atul Punj,
will head to Egypt and Libya Oct 26 to discuss project proposals with
their counterparts there.
The delegation will also comprise senior executives of corporate giants like the Essar Group, Sanmar Group and Apollo Group.
They
are also expected to meet key ministers in Morsi's cabinet who are
handling finance, petroleum and infrastructure portfolios.
Around
45 Indian companies have already invested over $2.5 billion in projects
in Egypt. In fact, Indian companies have shown their confidence in the
country's long term potential by staying put right through the
post-revolution period.
"Fresh Indian projects have been launched
since the Jan 25 revolution in sectors like petrochemicals,
pharmaceuticals, readymade garments and education. I expect these trends
to strengthen with the return of political and economic stability,"
said Suri.
In a sign of the continuing resilience of India-Egypt
economic ties, two-way trade last year grew by about 45 percent. India's
exports grew by 35 percent despite the global economic downturn and the
fluid situation in Egypt itself.
With Egypt speeding up its
democratic transition, new areas of collaborations are emerging in areas
of electoral technology and institution-building.
India and
Egypt signed a pact to establish an institutional framework for their
cooperation in the field of election management during the recent visit
of Justice Hatem Bagato, secretary general of the Supreme Presidential
Election Committee of Egypt.
India wakes up to new Egypt



