Brexit: Theresa May to visit India to lay foundations of trade deal

Blackleaf

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She flew there on an RAF plane:

MAYFLY



Theresa May rejects calls to raise Indian visa quota

BBC News
7 November 2016


International Trade Secretary Liam Fox is accompanying Theresa May on the three-day trip

Theresa May has rejected calls to relax Indian visa rules, saying the UK has a "good system" for applications.

The prime minister, who is in Delhi to pave the way for the UK's first post-Brexit trade deal, said the UK was already able to attract "the brightest and the best" from outside the EU.

"Nine out of 10 visa applications from India are already accepted," she said.

But she said the UK could give ground if Indians who overstayed their visas could be returned more swiftly.

"The UK will consider further improvements to our visa offer if, at the same time, we can step up the speed and volume of returns of Indians with no right to remain," she told reporters.

Her government also intends to make it easier for wealthy Indian business executives to come to the UK.

A small group of high-net-worth individuals and their families will be offered access to the Great Club - a bespoke visa and immigration service - to make visa applications smoother.

Thousands of Indians on work visas will also be able to join the Registered Traveller service which will mean they can get through UK border controls more quickly.

"As we leave the EU, we want to ensure that the UK remains one of the most attractive countries in the world to do business and invest," Mrs May said.



Visa issues risk dominating Theresa May's first trade trip since becoming prime minister.

India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi told a technology summit in Delhi he wanted to encourage "greater mobility" for its young people in education.

He said: "Education is vital for our students and will define our engagement in a shared future.

"We must therefore encourage greater mobility and participation of young people in education and research opportunities."

Cobra Beer founder Lord Bilimoria earlier said restrictions on staying in the UK after their studies meant the number of Indians attending UK universities had halved in the past five years.

He said "movement of people" would form a key part of any trade negotiations.

'Bridge-building'

The number of study visas issued to Indian nationals fell from 68,238 in the year to June 2010 to 11,864 five years later, official UK figures show.

The solution, according to Karan Bilimoria, is to exclude foreign students from Britain's statistics on net migration, which Mrs May has pledged to cut to below 100,000 annually - down from 336,000 in the year to June 2015.

"We need to immediately get the government, Theresa May, on this visit to announce and say 'we're no longer going to include international students within the net migration figures,'" crossbencher Lord Bilimoria told BBC Radio 4's The World This Weekend.

He added: "The reality is Theresa May when she was home secretary did deliver very, very negative messages towards immigration."

"She has got a lot of bridge-building to do when she goes to India."

Mrs May will be accompanied on the three-day trip by International Trade Secretary Liam Fox and trade minister Greg Hands as well as representatives from 33 UK companies.

Deals expected to be confirmed during the trip include:

A £1.2m joint venture between the Pandrol Group UK and Rahee Group in India to set up a manufacturing plant for rail projects

A £15m imaging and diagnostic centre in Chennai by Lyca Health UK

A £350m investment from UK start-up Kloudpad in high-tech electronics manufacturing in Kochi

Analysis: Simon Jack, BBC business editor in Delhi

The prime minister flew into Delhi late last night to be greeted by the worst smog this city has seen in nearly 20 years.

Where better to get a taste of life beyond the EU than India. With such deep historical links between the two countries surely the UK can cut through the bureaucratic smog that saw Brussels spend nearly a decade negotiating, but ultimately fail, to agree a deal with the world's fastest growing economy?

But Indian business leaders are confused. No-one knows what the UK's relationship with the EU will eventually look like, and many are unsure about how much can be usefully discussed until the UK has withdrawn from the EU - a point that is at least two years away.

Some things are clear and all too familiar. Trade and immigration are linked. If the UK wants better access to Indian markets, the government in Delhi wants a looser approach to UK work and student visas. This week saw Britain's visa rules for foreign visitors tightened.

Specific deals will be announced over the next 24 hours but more clarity around a trade relationship that has stagnated or even declined in recent years is likely to remain enveloped in the Delhi smog.

Theresa May rejects calls to raise Indian visa quota - BBC News


 
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Blackleaf

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We won't be sari about Brexit! Theresa May hails 'world of opportunities' outside the EU as she dons traditional Hindu garb during trade trip to India

Theresa May travelled to Bangalore, the IT capital of India, on final day of three-day trade mission

The PM then made a colourful visit to the Someshwara Temple in Bangalore, donning traditional clothing

Visited Dynamatic Technologies factory where Indian workers assemble components for Airbus in Swindon

She was mobbed by pupils at a Bangalore primary school to watch flypast before visiting a temple

By James Tapsfield, Political Editor For Mailonline and Matt Dathan, Political Correspondent For Mailonline
8 November 2016


Theresa May is on the last day of her trade trip to India

Theresa May donned a sari on the final day of her visit to India, as she declared the trade mission a success in her drive to build 'global Britain'.

Mrs May wore the traditional Indian clothing as she visited the Sri Someshwara Hindu temple in Bangalore, the southern city which has become the IT sector hub of the sub-continent.

The PM has been leading a business delegation with the aim of bringing down barriers to commerce and paving the way for a free trade agreement following Brexit.

Speaking to Sky News at the end of her three-day visit, she said: 'Leaving the EU presents us with a world of opportunities and I'm determined to seize them.

'That's why I'm here in India, delivering on global Britain. And I have to say the response has been very good.

'During this visit, we've seen £1 billion worth of deals being signed and we've come to an agreement with the Indian government that we will work together with them on developing our trade relationship for the future.

'What does that mean? It means more jobs, more investment in the UK, more trade for British businesses and that's good for everyone.'

The first leg of Mrs May's visit, in the capital New Delhi, was dominated by tensions over visas, with Indian PM Narendra Modi putting pressure on the UK to ease restrictions on students and skilled workers coming to Britain.

Mrs May announced new measures to make trips to the UK easier for senior business executives, and she offered to discuss improvements in the visa application process for Indian citizens in return for greater co-operation over the return of migrants who overstay their permission to remain.


The PM donned traditional garb as she visited the Sri Someshwara Hindu temple in Bangalore


Theresa May hailed a joint UK-Indian hi-tech engineering project as she visited the city of Bangalore as part of a drive to boost trade. Pictured, the Prime Minister watches a flypast by the Indian Air Force with pupils at a primary school in Bangalore




Mrs May, who was this afternoon flying back to Britain, made India the first destination outside Europe for her first bilateral as PM

But for the Prime Minister, trade has been the priority, with deals sealed during the trip expected to create more than 1,300 jobs in the UK.

Mrs May issued a warning on Monday of the risks of stagnation and falling incomes if the UK fails to make a determined push for new trade opportunities after Brexit.

'As Britain leaves the EU, we're determined not to turn our backs on the world but to forge a new, global, outward-looking role for ourselves,' she told a business summit in New Delhi.


Mrs May went to the temple on the final leg of her visit to India today, before boarding her official plane for the flight home


Mrs May told ITV News: 'The message I've had here is that people actively want to do business with the UK.'

'Because we know from history what happens when countries do not embrace the opportunities of the world - they stagnate, they get poorer, they don't protect their people, they make them worse off.'

Mrs May said she had detected real interest in India in doing more trade with Britain after its departure from the EU, which she aims to complete by 2019.

She told ITV News: 'The message I've had here is that people actively want to do business with the UK.'

'The message I'm getting is that everybody wants to build on the trade relationship that the UK has with India. They see opportunities and benefits for India and the UK going forward.'


Mrs May received a gift after visiting the Sri Someshwara Temple after she had earlier travelled to Bangalore on a three-day trade mission designed to pave the way for close commercial links with the south Asian giant after Brexit


Mrs May's trip has seen memorandums of understanding signed on intellectual property rights and the ease of doing business in India, and she and Mr Modi agreed to co-operate on cyber-security and tackling violent extremism online


An Indian Hindu priest escorts British Prime Minister Theresa May during her visit to Someshwara Swamy temple in Bangalore, India

Although EU rules block the UK from entering formal negotiations on a free trade deal with India until withdrawal is complete, Mrs May has made clear she is determined to do the groundwork for an early post-Brexit agreement and to tackle barriers to trade which can be dealt with immediately.

Her trip has seen memorandums of understanding signed on intellectual property rights and the ease of doing business in India, and she and Mr Modi agreed to co-operate on cyber-security and tackling violent extremism online.


Although EU rules block the UK from entering formal negotiations on a free trade deal with India until withdrawal is complete, Mrs May has made clear she is determined to do the groundwork for an early post-Brexit agreement




During her trip, Mrs May announced new measures to make trips to the UK easier for senior business executives, and she offered to discuss improvements in the visa application process for Indian citizens


Mrs May left the Someshwara Temple in Bangalore surrounded by aides and other staff after her visit in Bangalore

In Bangalore, she visited a Dynamatic Technologies factory where Indian workers assemble components machined in the company's Swindon and Bristol facilities for Airbus jets.

And she joined flag-waving children at the city's Stonehill Primary School to witness a flypast of Indian Air Force jets and helicopters in her honour.

The flypast was the first of its kind offered to a visiting head of government, and follows a similar display by the Red Arrows during Mr Modi's visit to the UK last year.

First stop was the Dynamatic Technologies factory where Indian workers assemble components machined in the company's Swindon and Bristol facilities for Airbus jets.

The contract for flap track beams for Airbus 330s is worth £120 million to the UK economy over 10 years and has created 60 new jobs across Dynamatic's two UK sites and 100 jobs in Bangalore.


Theresa May travelled to the IT capital of India on the final day of a three-day trade mission designed to pave the way for close commercial links with the south Asian giant after Brexit. Pictured, the Prime Minister meets pupils at a Bangalore primary school


Therea May watches a flypast by the Indian Air Force with pupils at a primary school in Bangalore today


Theresa May (pictured being greeted at Bangalore's airport today) announced new measures to make trips to the UK easier for senior business executives, and she offered to discuss improvements in the visa application process for Indian citizens in return for greater co-operation over the return of migrants who overstay their permission to stay

Touring the Bangalore plant, Mrs May said: 'This collaboration between Dynamatic Technologies UK and Indian workforce demonstrates the strength of the UK's partnership with India.

'It showcases British technology with Indian manufacturing and delivers real benefit to both our economies, creating jobs back in Swindon and Bristol as well as here in India.'

The first leg of Mrs May's three-day visit, in capital New Delhi, was dominated by tensions over visas, with Indian PM Narendra Modi putting pressure on the UK to ease restrictions on students and skilled workers coming to Britain.

Mrs May announced new measures to make trips to the UK easier for senior business executives, and she offered to discuss improvements in the visa application process for Indian citizens in return for greater co-operation over the return of migrants who overstay their permission to stay.


Theresa May greets children at Stonehill Government Primary School in Bangalore today



I wonder if May will stay in India to watch the cricket. The First Test between India and England starts tomorrow and she's a huge cricket fan.
 
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Blackleaf

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People a lot like you present a picture of Obama in traditional dress as proof Obama is a Muslim, so how is this different?

Well Barack wore Muslim garb at a private family occasion.

Mrs May is wearing Hindu garb whilst being shown around a Hindu temple.
 

Murphy

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I wonder, should India trade with the UK, will the new Muslim government insist on Halal? (for the imported foodstuffs that is)

 

tay

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I wonder, should India trade with the UK, will the new Muslim government insist on Halal? (for the imported foodstuffs that is)

I doubt if Britain will insist on Halal only. But I do hope Britain does something about the literacy issue. Seems there are more useless pictures in an article than words so I figure most of them can't read and only take their cues from pictures..
 

Kreskin

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What do you plan on selling to India? Cricket balls? They can build them cheaper.
 

Blackleaf

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What do you plan on selling to India? Cricket balls? They can build them cheaper.

The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland is the world's largest exporter of financial services and professional services, with a trade surplus of £71bn in 2013.

Britain actually exports large amounts of cheese to France (this may sound surprising until you discover than Britain actually has more varieties of cheese than France has), tea to China (tea plantations in Cornwall) and curry (Britain loves its curries) to India.

UK merchandise exports to India are now composed more of commodities, particularly oil and gold, than was the case twenty years ago. Machinery forms a smaller proportion. The UK is also an exporter of motor vehicles, petroleum, aircraft (the UK's aerospace industry is the second-largest in the world) bituminous minerals and telecomminucations equipment to India.



Latest score after two days in the First Test between India and England at the Saurashtra Cricket Association Stadium in Rajkot:

First Innings

England: 537
India: 63-0