No BPO ban in UK: Straw

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| On the multilateral trade front, Jaitley said the Cancun draft for trade liberalisation was lop-sided and India was willing to go ahead with negotiations only if its defensive interests in agriculture were accommodated. |
| The minister said while India was engaging in negotiations and was proactive on services and manufacturing, agriculture remained its main area of concern. |
| "In agriculture our flexibilities are limited," he said, adding that India's concerns were two-fold -- market access and subsidies. "It is on market access that we have our greatest sensitivities because too many people are involved in the sector.... One tariff line could affect a few million Indians," Jaitley said. |
| "For India it is not only subsidies....We can't open our doors in agriculture even though we are opening in services and manufacturing," he added. |
| On the bilateral front, Straw wanted India to cut down the Customs duty on alcoholic beverages and also demanded the liberalisation of legal services which would enable UK-based firms to practice in the country. |
First Published: Feb 07 2004 | 12:00 AM IST