India-Iran 'dosti' as old as history, says Modi after signing Chabahar port pact

India-Iran dosti as old as history, says Modi after signing Chabahar port pact
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Claiming that the conditions were right to improve the bilateral relations between the Tehran and New Delhi, Iranian President Hassan Rouhani on Monday said that Chabahar would mark the beginning of a new cooperation between South and North.

Claiming that the conditions were right to improve the bilateral relations between the Tehran and New Delhi, Iranian President Hassan Rouhani on Monday said that Chabahar would mark the beginning of a new cooperation between South and North.

Addressing a joint press conference, Rouhani said, "Economic relations between India and Iran have improved from the past and have potential to develop further."

Explaining that political issues and intelligence sharing in fight against terrorism occupied much of their discussion, Rouhani added “We have always attached great importance to our relations with India, a major power."

“Chabahar can become very big symbol of cooperation between Iran and India. Economic relationship between countries can become much bigger compared to the past,” he added.

Emphasising that India and Iran were not new friends, Narendra Modi said, “Our 'dosti' is as old as history. Our society is connected through Ideas, Arts, Culture and Tradition. As friends and neighbours, we have shared interest in each other’s growth and prosperity, and joys and sorrows.”

“Visiting Iran is a great privilege for me. Through ages, the beauty and richness of the Persian heritage has attracted the world to Iran. On behalf of 1.25 billion Indians, I extend warm greeting to people of Iran,” Modi added.

Reminiscing with gratitude that Iran was the first country that came forward to help when Gujarat was struck by earthquake, Modi said that India was proud to have stood by Iran during its difficult times.

He also said “The agreements signed today has opened new chapter in relations of two countries. I complement the leadership of Iran for there farsighted diplomacy.”

India will invest billions of dollars in setting up industries ranging from aluminum smelter to urea plants in Iran's Chabahar free trade zone after it signed a pact to operate a strategic port on the Persian Gulf nation's southern coast.

The inking of commercial contract to build and run the strategic port of Chabahar will help India gain a foothold in Iran and win access to Afghanistan, Russia and Europe, thus circumventing Pakistan, Road Transport, Highways and Shipping Minister Nitin Gadkari said.

"The distance between Kandla and the Chabahar port is less than the distance between New Delhi and Mumbai, and so what this agreement does is to enable us quick movement of goods first to Iran and then onwards to Afghanistan and Russia through a new rail and road link," he explained.

"Over Rs 1 lakh crore investment can happen in Chabahar free trade zone," he said.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi arrived here on Sunday on a two-day visit seeking to further cement Indo-Iranian ties and explore avenues to bolster trade in a big way in the wake of lifting of sanctions against Iran.

Iran, Gadkari said, has cheap natural gas and power that Indian firms are keen to tap to build a 0.5-million tonne aluminium smelter plant as well as urea manufacturing units.

"We spend Rs 45,000 crore annually on urea subsidy, and if we can manufacture it in the Chabahar free trade zone and move it through the port to Kandla and onward to hinterland, we can save that amount," he said.

Addressing the media, President Rouhani said “Chabahar can become very big symbol of cooperation between Iran and India. Economic relationship between countries can become much bigger compared to the past.”

Explaining that political issues and intelligence sharing in fight against terrorism occupied much of their discussion, Rouhani added “We have always attached great importance to our relations with India, a major power.”

An initial pact to build the Chabahar port was first inked during the Atal Bihari Vajpayee's government in 2003, but the deal slipped through during subsequent years.

The Zaranj-Delaram road constructed by India in 2009 can give access to Afghanistan's Garland Highway, setting up road access to four major cities in Afghanistan, Herat, Kandahar, Kabul and Mazar-e-Sharif.

India is also reported to finance another road network inside Afghanistan to enable Iran to access as far as Tajikistan through a shorter route.
Chabahar is about 100 km from the Chinese-run Gwadar port in Pakistan, which is part of China's USD 46 billion plan to develop China-Pakistan Economic Corridor aimed at opening new trade and transport routes across Asia.

The Indian joint venture company will invest more than USD 85.2 million in development of the port. India's Exim Bank will provide a credit line of another USD 150 million.

India is blocked from land access to Afghanistan and through it to the central Asia countries because of opposition from Pakistan, which sees India's expansive diplomacy in the region as a threat.

India, Afghanistan and Iran separately signed an agreement to set up a trade and transport corridor, with Chabahar as the hub. Road and rail links are being built so that the land-locked Afghanistan can get access to the Iranian port as an alternative to the Pakistani port of Karachi.

India will install equipment and operate two berths in the first phase of the Chabahar port with an investment of USD 85.2 million and annual revenue expenditure of USD 22.9 million on a 10-year lease, Gadkari said.

The Chabahar project moved slowly because of western sanctions against Iran. The sanctions were lifted in January and since then India has been pushing for conclusion of an agreement.

About a fifth of the oil consumed worldwide each day passes through the Strait of Hormuz, a shipping choke point that separates the Persian Gulf from the Gulf of Oman and Indian Ocean. Gadkari also said India will build a 500-km railway between Chabahar and Zahedan which will connect Chabahar to Central Asia.

Chabahar port, located in the Sistan-Baluchistan Province on Iran's southern coast, is of great strategic utility for India. It lies outside the Persian Gulf and is easily accessed from India's western coast.

The port project will be the first overseas venture for an Indian state-owned port. The Jawaharlal Nehru port, India's biggest container port, holds a 60 per cent stake in Indian Ports Global while the Kandla port has the remaining 40 per cent.

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