Subscribe for notification
Categories: Latest

India, Maldives Hold Talks To Enhance Trade Cooperation

India on Wednesday said it looked forward to strengthening bilateral economic cooperation with the Maldives as its envoy held discussions with a senior minister of the archipelagic nation.

Mohamed Saeed, Maldives’ Minister of Economic Development and Trade, met with Munu Mahawar, Indian High Commissioner to the archipelago nation on Tuesday.

The meeting comes weeks after India allowed the export of certain quantities of essential commodities for the year 2024-25 at the request of the Maldivian government and ahead of the May 10 deadline imposed by President Mohamed Muizzu for the complete repatriation of 88 Indian military personnel from his country.

“Minister @em_saeed met with the Indian High Commissioner to Maldives, H. E. Munu Mahawar, and discussed potential areas for trade & economic cooperation. @HCIMaldives,” posted Maldives’ Ministry of Economic Development and Trade from its official X handle along with photos of the meeting.

Soon after, the Indian High Commission responded: ”We look forward to continued engagements with @MoEDmv for further enhancing India-Maldives economic cooperation.”

We look forward to continued engagements with @MoEDmv for further enhancing India-Maldives economic cooperation. https://t.co/3B5rZSdzC2

— India in Maldives (@HCIMaldives) May 1, 2024

Earlier on April 5, displaying a strong commitment to supporting the human-centric development in the archipelagic nation, India said the request to allow export of certain quantities of essential commodities for the year 2024-25 was being done “under a unique bilateral mechanism” under which the quotas for each of these items have been revised upwards.

There was also an increase of 5 per cent in the quotas for eggs, potatoes, onions, sugar, rice, wheat flour and dal (pulses) and the approved quantities were the highest since this arrangement came into effect in 1981.

The 1981 India and Maldives trade agreement provides for the export of essential commodities. According to the records from the Indian High Commission, growing from modest beginnings, India-Maldives bilateral trade crossed the USD 300 million mark for the first time in 2021, which further crossed the USD 500 million mark in 2022.

“India emerged as Maldives’ 2nd largest trade partner in 2022 and the largest in 2023. Indian imports from the Maldives primarily comprise scrap metals while Indian exports to the Maldives include a variety of engineering and industrial products like drugs and pharmaceuticals, radar apparatus, rock boulders, aggregates, cement and agricultural produce such as rice, spices, fruits, vegetables and poultry produce etc,” it said.

The April 5 announcement also said that the quota for river sand and stone aggregates, crucial items for the booming construction industry in the Maldives, has been increased by 25 per cent to 10,00,000 MT each. 

Recent Posts

Delta Airline Passenger Gets Frustrated After His First-Class Seat Was Given To Service Dog

A Reddit post has gone viral after an airline passenger was downgraded from his first-class…

2 hours ago

Rozgar Mela: PM Modi Distributes 71,000 Appointment Letters To New Recruits

Prime Minister Narendra Modi distributed over 71,000 appointment letters to newly recruited individuals via video…

2 hours ago

Hyderabad Top Cop Apologises For Remarks On National Media

Hyderabad Police Commissioner C.V. Anand on Monday apologised for his remarks about national media over…

2 hours ago

Who Was Epigamia CEO Rohan Mirchandani, Who Died Of Cardiac Arrest At 41

Rohan Mirchandani, the co-founder of Epigamia, died on December 21 after suffering a cardiac arrest.…

2 hours ago

9 Lord Ayyappa Devotees Injured In Cylinder Blast In Karnataka

Nine devotees of Lord Ayyappa sustained serious burn injuries due to a LPG cylinder blast…

2 hours ago

“It’s Love…”: Kate Middleton’s Christmas Message After A Difficult Year

Kate Middleton, a member of the British royal family, has recorded a heartfelt message for…

3 hours ago