India
to allow FDI from Pakistan, open border post
Reuters –
Pakistani
Rangers and Indian Border Security Force personnel (obscured) lower the flags
of the two countries during a daily flag lowering ceremony at the
India-Pakistan joint border at Wagah, December 14, 2006. REUTERS/Mian
Khursheed/Files
By Annie
Banerji
From NEW
DELHI (Reuters) - India has decided to allow foreign direct investment from
Pakistan, Trade Minister Anand Sharma said on Friday, hours before the two
countries were due to open a trading post on the Wagah border in the latest
sign of thawing economic ties.
Liberalising
heavily restricted trade and investment flows is now the driver of peace
efforts between the neighbours, whose fragile ties were shattered when
Pakistani militants attacked Mumbai in 2008.
"India
has taken an in-principle decision, as a part of the process to deepen our
economic engagement, to allow foreign direct investments from Pakistan in
India," said Sharma at a news conference with his Pakistani counterpart.
Despite
thousands of years of shared history and culture and a combined population of
1.4 billion people, cross-border trade remains paltry - a legacy of three wars
since their independence from Britain in 1947.
Under
current rules, Pakistani citizens cannot directly invest in India. Investment
flows are unlikely to surge, but the move will go some way to addressing
concerns by Pakistani businessmen that India places too many restrictions on
them.
More
than 600 Pakistani businesses are in New Delhi this week at a trade fair to
promote their products to the Indian market.
In the
face of some domestic opposition, the government of Pakistan President Asif Ali
Zardari last November vowed to grant India most favoured nation status, which
ends restrictions that require most products to move via a third country.
The move
was hailed by India and the two countries are now focused on resolving economic
issues before moving on to more intractable problems such as the disputed
region of Kashmir.
Sharma
also said an agreement to relax restrictions on visas for Pakistani businessmen
was almost ready.
Later on
Friday, Sharma and the Pakistani trade minister, Makhdoom Amin Fahim, will open
an expanded border trade terminal at Wagah, between Lahore and Amritsar.
With a
capacity to handle about 600 trucks a day, the border crossing is expected to
help bring trade to $8 billion annually from the current level of $2.6 billion,
industry chamber ASSOCHAM said in a study published this week.
(Writing
by Frank Jack Daniel; editing by Malini Menon and Sanjeev Miglani)
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