Diplomatist Magazine Diplomatist April-May 2019 | Page 75

AFRICA DIARY broke protocol and personally received Prime Minister P.V. Narasimha Rao on his arrival at the airport for the conference and saw him off . The chemistry between the two leaders was excellent. India and its technology made an impact at the summit. At the conference, India became the Convener of the Group on Solar Energy and Biotechnology. India handed over solar technology equipment/panels that it had put up at an exhibition, specially put up for the Dakar summit, promising to pass on the technology and off ered to train personnel. These gestures left a deep imprint on their people. The other major thing announced by the Indian P.M. at the summit was to set up a Entrepreneurial Training & Development Centre (ETDC) in Dakar, run it for fi ve years, train personnel from all over Africa and also the local trainers to prepare them to take over the running of the Institute after the stipulated period. I was pleased to hear that the ETDC was inaugurated in 2002. In 2005, I returned to Dakar for a brief visit and was delighted to fi nd the many changes that have taken place in Dakar, since my days. It is now a bustling business city. The number of Indian businessmen in the country has gone up to a few thousand. The day I landed in Dakar, I was pleased to fi nd TATA buses being publicly introduced on Dakar roads and helped to revamp its urban public transportation system. In a symbolic gesture, President Abdoulaye Wade and his Ministers took the initial ride on those buses. This proved to be a major publicity coup for India in the local media. During the same visit, I was honoured by Foreign Minister Mr. Cheikh Tidiane Gadio when he graciously invited me over to his home to his private birthday party with his close friends. During my tenure in Senegal India’s trade and commercial links, as also investments in a range of sectors including textiles, manufacturing and chemicals started increasing and the same trend has continued ever since. Back in the 1990s, Senegal’s largest industrial complex Industrie Chimque du Senegal (ICS) entered into a joint venture involving the Indian fertilizer giant IFFCO and started exporting the bulk of its phosphate output to India. I understand that in 2007, IFFCO undertook a $100 million project to revive the 6.6 lakh tonne capacity phosphoric acid plant of the ICS to raise its production to optimum levels. Here is a success story to talk about. Around that time in two other sectors, Mr. Vijay Mallya’s companies were active through acquisition locally of Berger Paints and the prestigious textile unit SOTIBA. But their operations did not last long unfortunately and were sold to other parties. India provides scholarships for training Senegalese personnel under its Indian Technical and Economic Cooperation Programme. Senegal is also part of India’s Pan-African e-Network project that allows it to tap Indian expertise through telemedicine and tele-education. A hub earth station of the network is located in the Sebikotane village near the capital city of Dakar. Senegal, once the largest importer of rice in Africa, sought and got technological support from India for increasing its rice production in 2008, which improved so dramatically that the country has gone from being an importer to a net rice exporter in a matter of four years! Kirloskar Brothers had a lot to do with it and their pumps earned India a wonderful reputation as the ultimate brand name even in the countryside. India has extended concessional Lines of Credit (LoC) to Senegal for:(a) development of rural SMEs and purchase of agricultural machinery and equipment from India;(b) supply of buses (400) and spares by Tata Motors;(c) irrigation projects; (d) Women Poverty Alleviation Programme;(e) IT Sector, hardware and logistics movement; (f) rural electrifi cation;(g) fi shing industry development projects;(h) acquiring railway coaches and locomotives from India; (i) supply of medical equipment etc. to four hospitals in Senegal and (j) establishment of a slaughterhouse, with modern facilities, a tannery and livestock market. India and Senegal have forged long-lasting and abiding links. Senegal has realised that the donor aid model from the Western world, some free grants on ill-conceived projects and lots of inapplicable/inappropriate advice doled out through hordes of consultants with little capacity building induced dependency in these countries and produced no sustainable results. They are convinced that co-operation with India as equal partners, on the other hand, put their country on the path of fast track development. They have seen that partnership with India has turned out to be more constructive, tangible and has resulted in skill development, capacity building and transfer of appropriate technology. In conclusion, Senegal is fortunate that it has successively had stable leadership at the Presidential level in Leopold Senghor, Abdou Diouf, Maitre Abdoulaye Wade. The present incumbent President Macky Sall is continuing in the same vein by intensifying eff orts in bringing about improvements in peoples’ lives and to address endemic structural policy and governance (both economic and political) challenges facing the continent. Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who briefl y met President Macky Sall at an international conference, recently discussed ways to carry forward bilateral relations between the two countries to new heights. Senegal has now shown interest in importing three-wheeler scooter rickshaw to ease the urban transport problem. Many other new avenues are being explored to carry forward this relationship to a new stature. The future of India-Senegal relations looks promising indeed.  *Author served in West Africa as Ambassador of India to Senegal, Mali, Mauritania, Guinea Bissau, Cape Verde and the Gambia. He was posted in various capacities during his career spanning 35 years in Indian diplomatic missions in Moscow, Cairo, Kuala Lumpur, London, Sydney, Fiji and Jamaica. His last posting was as Ambassador to Ukraine. Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary Diplomatist • Vol 7 • Issue 4 • April-May 2019, Noida • 75