Minister of State for External Affairs M J Akbar, in his remarks at the Inaugural Session of Indian Ocean Conference here, said the world must recognise India's critical role in both the quest for prosperity and the existential struggle to eliminate what Prime Minister Narendra Modi has described "terrorism as the gravest threat since World War II".
"India's dual ability to emancipate the Asian economy in partnership with those who seek a better life; and its determination to confront today's merchants of death, will determine whether the 21st century belongs to Asia," Akbar said.
Addressing the session here via video conferencing, External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj said the Indian Ocean Region is "perhaps the major bright spot in an otherwise difficult global economic environment".
"In modern times, the Indian Ocean Region has also seen the unfortunate effects of colonialism. Today it is, undoubtedly, the most promising engine for reviving the global economy," she said, adding that the importance of the Indian Ocean resonates far beyond its shores.
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"In Hindi, the word SAGAR means the ocean and entails a five-pronged approach. This involves: - enhancing capacities to safeguard land and maritime territories and interests; deepening economic and security cooperation in the littoral; promoting collective action to deal with natural disasters and maritime threats like piracy, terrorism and emergent non-state actors.
Swaraj stressed that India has shown commitment to working with its littoral neighbours to fully develop the Blue Economy, develop India's coastal and island territories, and link the hinterlands.
In fostering such cooperation, we have a preference for regional frameworks, the most notable being the Indian Ocean Rim Association (IORA), Swaraj said.
"It is important that security concerns do not thwart these efforts at making the Blue Economy a driver of 21st Century growth. The Indian Ocean remains the most prone area to non-traditional security threats such as natural disasters, maritime terrorism, illegal fishing, and trafficking of humans, weapons and narcotics," Swaraj said.
Akbar, in his remarks that the conference that was attended by Sr Lankan Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe and Singaporean Foreign Minister Vivian Balakrishnan among others, said, "Prime Minister Modi knows his mind; he recognises the dimensions of both challenge and opportunity. He is the leader that India needs at this swivel moment in our individual and collective fortunes".
"He has reached out with his Act East policy; and he has no illusions about the threat from terrorism and its malevolent sponsors, who seem to be unaware that they are committing strategic suicide," Akbar said.
"This complements the traditional trade routes, and the rising aspiration of partner nations willing to work in harmony. The Phoenix Horizon is blessed with comity and cross-cultural influences that have grown into identities along the Indian Ocean over centuries.
"India both complements and protects rising Asia, with its powerful economies like those of Japan and China and, even more so, the growing capacities of the littoral nations across the Indian Ocean, to foster economic growth and stability through mutually beneficial cooperation," Akbar said.
Asserting that India's policy objectives are transparent, Akbar said it seeks measures that will facilitate the natural flow of peaceful inter-action and consequent growth through cooperation.
"We do not believe that regional confrontational attitudes are helpful in the ocean, or extended regions like the South China Sea, to give one instance. Law must be respected; after all, law preserves order," Akbar said.