Cameron to visit India amidst scandal
2013-02-16 09:32
London - British Prime Minister David Cameron heads to
India next week with an extensive trade delegation for a visit clouded by a
corruption scandal over British-built helicopters.
The trip to Delhi and the commercial capital Mumbai comes
hot on the heels of a visit to India by French President Francois Hollande to
drum up trade, underlining the growing importance of the Indian economy.
Cameron said ahead of the visit that he wanted the
relationship between Britain and India to be "one of the great
partnerships of the 21st century".
But his second trip to India as prime minister will
require deft handling after the Indian government said it was cancelling a $748m
deal to buy 12 helicopters for VIPs from an Italian firm amid allegations the
contract was won through kickbacks.
India took steps to scrap the contract on Friday after
Italian investigators probed allegations that aerospace group Finmeccanica, the
parent company of Anglo-Italian helicopter unit AgustaWestland, had broken the
law by paying bribes to foreign officials.
The helicopters, three of which have already been
delivered, are manufactured in southwest England.
Cameron's first overture to India was snubbed last year
when Delhi selected a French fighter jet over the part-British Eurofighter in a
$12bn contract, a deal which Hollande was seeking to tie up during his visit.
The British government has taken note of the fact that
the huge contract with Dassault Aviation is still not finalised, and hopes to
remind the Indian government of Eurofighter's merits in case they change their
mind.
A government source told Britain's Press Association news
agency: "Hollande was in India this week and a deal has not been signed so
we will want to find out from the Indians how their talks are progressing with
the French."
Aside from defence, British retailers are keen to
increase their presence in India and executives from the Tesco supermarket
chain, Britain's biggest retailer which already has a joint venture in India,
are expected to fill some of the seats on Cameron's plane.
The prime minister remains confident that he will reach
of goal of doubling Britain's trade with India from $17.8bn in 2010 to $35.7bn
by the time he faces the next general election in 2015.
Cameron also wants to use the trip to correct any
misunderstandings about his government's drive to bring immigration numbers
under control amid concerns that young Indians could be deterred from applying
to study in Britain.
Admitting that the government "haven't perhaps
communicated this properly" to would-be students, he said there was
"no limit" on the numbers of Indians studying at British universities
or staying on in graduate-level jobs.
In an interview with the London-based Asian television
and radio station Sunrise, Cameron said he was "really, really
enthusiastic" about the prospects for increased trade between the two
countries.
"We both want to see jobs, we want to see growth, we
want to see investment," he said.
"It's a very special partnership between Britain and
India.
"We've got these ties of history, language, culture,
but really I see it as a very strong relationship about the future - huge
investment from India into Britain, huge investment from Britain into India,
lots of our businesses partnering, lots of trade and lots of jobs."