Sunday, October 16, 2016

Welcome Remarks by Prime Minister at BRICS Leaders' Plenary Session
Your Excellency President Xi Jinping, Your Excellency President Jacob Zuma, Your Excellency President Michel Temer, Your Excellency President Vladimir Putin,
Distinguished Delegates,
I join 1.25 billion Indians in once again extending a very warm welcome to all of you in Goa for the eighth (8th) BRICS Summit.
I am honoured to chair the BRICS Leaders’ Plenary Meeting. Our exchanges earlier during the day were productive.
This session should build on them and deliberate on a pro-active agenda of action for BRICS.
The footprint of intra-BRICS engagement has expanded over time to include large areas of economic activity.
The scope of our partnership today stretches from agriculture to industry and innovation; trade to tourism; environment to energy; films to football; skill development to smart cities; and from fighting corruption and money laundering to securing our societies.
This year, we have taken BRICS to our cities and provinces and linked it directly to our people from different walks of life.
Excellencies,
We are celebrating 10 years of our partnership under BRICS. A decade of collaboration has produced strong benefits of cooperation.
We are entitled to take pride in our initiatives and achievements.
The establishment of New Development Bank and the Contingency Reserve Arrangement are indeed signature achievements.
In a world of new security challenges and continuing economic uncertainties, BRICS stands as a beacon of peace potential and promise.
Our work holds much meaning for the developing world.
In the past year, BRICS have played an active role in shaping the global agenda for change and development.
Our association with Agenda 2030, the Paris Climate Agreement, and the Addis Ababa Action Agenda on Financing for Development has been purposeful and productive.
And, we remain at the forefront of pushing change in the global governance architectures.
Excellencies,
While our achievements have been substantial, we need to sustain the positive direction and strong momentum of intra-BRICS engagement.
We also need to add more content to it.
Let me offer some thoughts for your consideration.
First, the process of institution building in BRICS must continue to remain a focus area.
The institutions that we build must support the development of our countries and regions.
They should enable greater flexibility and freedom, and offer wider choices in responding to our developmental priorities.
We look forward to translating into reality the idea of a BRICS Credit Rating Agency.
We must also speed up the work on setting up BRICS Agriculture Research Centre, BRICS Railway Research Network, and BRICS Sports Council.
There is also a clear need to build norms, create structures and pool our capacities to stop tax evasion, and fight against black money and corruption.
Our agencies must also build mechanisms of information sharing to bring to justice the tax offenders and money launderers.
BRICS should push for empowering the global governance institutions to reflect today's reality.
Second, transform the quantum and quality of trade and investment linkages among BRICS.
In 2015, intra-BRICS trade stood at about 250 billion US Dollars.
We should set ourselves a target to double this number to US Dollars five hundred billion by 2020.
This requires businesses and industry in all five countries to scale up their engagement.
And, for governments to facilitate this process to the fullest. Our agreement on a tax and custom cooperation framework is a good start.
The BRICS Trade Fair and Exhibition just concluded in New Delhi should become a regular platform for business exchanges.
And, the BRICS New Development Bank must play an active role to support this objective.
It can also help integrate our SMEs into global value chains. We must also coordinate closely to preserve the central role of the Doha Development Round and the WTO.
Alongside, we should increase our cooperation and convergence at the G-20, WTO and other fora.
India has tabled a draft of the Trade Facilitation Agreement for Services at the WTO.
It seeks to maximize the benefits of services liberalization and trade to the developing countries.
A strong BRICS support to this proposal will be in our collective economic interest.
Third, focus on key priorities of our economic transformations.
Urbanization, infrastructure and innovation represent the key focus areas for BRICS economies.
Under India’s Chairmanship, we have placed emphasis on digital- technology, smart-cities, urbanization, and cooperation between our cities.
The next billion internet users will come from emerging markets.
Our cooperation must grab this opportunity to transform the basic structure of our economies.
Fourth, secure our societies.
In the world we inhabit today, security and counter-terrorism cooperation is necessary if we are to secure the lives of our citizens.
Terrorism casts a long shadow on our development and economic prosperity.
Its reach is now global. It has grown more lethal and adept at the use of technology.
Our response to terrorism must, therefore, be nothing less than comprehensive.
And, we need to act both individually and collectively. Selective approaches to terrorist individuals and organizations will not only be futile but also counter-productive.
There must be no distinction based on artificial and self-serving grounds.
Criminality should be the only basis for punitive action against the individuals and organizations responsible for carrying out terrorist acts.
Terrorist funding, their weapons supply, training and political support must be systematically cut off.
In this respect, we need to deepen the security cooperation between our National Security Advisors.
Early adoption of the draft Comprehensive Convention on International Terrorism will be an expression of our resolve to fight this menace.
Fifth, thriving people-to-people exchanges is the lifeblood of BRICS.
It brings vibrancy and richness to our partnership.
We have chosen to highlight this dimension this year.
The BRICS Films Festival, Trade Fair, Tourism Convention, Sports Council, Football Tournament and other related activities will help in creating millions of young stakeholders that will ultimately carry our partnership forward.
Excellencies,
I am eager to hear from my fellow BRICS leaders on their vision for a stronger, deeper and vibrant BRICS community.
I thank you for your attention.
Thank you.
Press Statement by Prime Minister following the 8th BRICS Summit
Excellencies, Ladies and gentlemen, Friends from the Media,
We have just concluded the eighth (8th) BRICS Summit.
It has been an honour and privilege to welcome President Xi, President Zuma President Temer, and President Putin to the beautiful state of Goa.
Our discussions, that spread over three sessions today, were detailed, substantive and productive.
In the morning, we exchanged views on important global issues, including terrorism, global economic scenario, and the need to reform the global governance architecture.
We also utilized the opportunity to review on-going BRICS cooperation.
During the Plenary Session, we focused on ideas and possibilities for BRICS future expansion in years ahead.
The conversation was useful and forward looking. And, as we mark a decade of BRICS, it is particularly timely. We have just ended a session with the BRICS Business Council.
We also heard from the President of the New Development Bank on the meaningful work that NDB has undertaken in its first year.
I am happy to share that we have adopted the Goa Declaration that lays down a comprehensive vision for our cooperation and coordination, within BRICS and on international issues.
Ladies and gentlemen,
Let me now turn to the issues that received high attention from the BRICS Leaders during the Summit.
We were unanimous in recognizing the threat that terrorism, extremism and radicalization presents, not just to the regional and global peace, stability and economic prosperity.
But, also to our society, our way of life and humanity as a whole.
We were also one in agreeing that BRICS need to work together and act decisively to combat this threat.
We underscored the need for close coordination on tracking sources of terrorist financing; and targeting the hardware of terrorism, including weapons' supplies, ammunition, equipment, and training.
We also agreed that those who nurture, shelter, support and sponsor such forces of violence and terror are as much a threat to us as the terrorists themselves.
India is happy to note the unity of thought and purpose on this serious global challenge.
Putting the global economy back on track was another focus point of our deliberations.
We recognized the positive contribution of BRICS countries' to global economic growth after the 2008 financial crisis.
We feel that it is necessary for economies to make public investments in long term infrastructure projects, coordinate macro-economic policy, drive growth, and promote world trade and manufacturing with renewed vigour.
We emphasized the central role for the WTO as the cornerstone of the multilateral trade architecture.
We acknowledged the need to strike a balance between economic development and environmental protection.
We welcome the early entry into force of the Paris Climate Agreement.
India was proud to ratify the Agreement on 2nd October this year, the birth anniversary of the foremost environmentalist in history, Mahatma Gandhi.
As BRICS Leaders, we agreed to focus on institution building within the BRICS as an effective way to pursue our development agenda.
We commended the New Development Bank on completion of its first year.
We agreed that the NDB should continue to focus on infrastructure, technology and renewable energy sectors.
We were united in our view to establish the BRICS Agriculture Research Platform, BRICS Railway Research Network, BRICS Sports Council, and various youth-centric fora.
We spoke in one voice of our resolve to promote the reform of the global financial and economic architecture, and expand the role of emerging and developing economies in the International Monetary Fund.
In order to further bridge the gap in the global financial architecture, we agreed to fast track the setting up of a BRICS Rating Agency.
We also agreed to enhance our coordination within the G20.
The vitality of people-to-people contacts amongst the BRICS countries has been a point of emphasis for us.
To this end, we are organizing over 100 activities throughout the year and taking BRICS to diverse geographies and demographies across our countries.
We have agreed to nurture people-to-people pillar of our cooperation as a continuing effort.
The BRICS is also committed to strengthen our consultations and cooperation on peace and security matters.
Ladies and Gentlemen,
A highlight of the Goa Summit will be the outreach to the BIMSTEC countries.
The Heads of State, Heads of Government and Leaders from Bangladesh, Bhutan, Myanmar, Nepal, Sri Lanka, and Thailand, that together with India, collectively constitute the BIMSTEC, are in Goa as the special guests to 8th BRICS Summit.
The first BRICS-BIMSTEC Outreach Summit will be held later today.
This will be a unique opportunity for BRICS and BIMSTEC leaders to hold a conversation on prospects for closer partnership and coordination.
As home to nearly two third of humanity, BRICS and BIMSTEC together can potentially unlock immense synergies with huge benefits for all our people.
In conclusion, I would like to thank my fellow leaders from the BRICS countries for their unqualified support in ensuring a successful 8th BRICS Summit.
Thank You.
Thank you very much.

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