External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj held wide-ranging talks with her French counterpart Jean-Yves Le Drian, during which they also decided to strengthen cooperation in the Indian Ocean Region (IOR), a development which comes barely days after India held quadrilateral talks with Japan, Australia and the US in Manila on the sidelines of India-ASEAN Summit.
The two ministers discussed key regional and international issues as well as the visit of the French President to India next year.
Though her statement did not name Pakistan, the remarks were in a veiled reference to it.
She said they also discussed concrete measures to expedite operations at the Jaitapur nuclear power project.
As part of the nuclear cooperation agreement between India and France signed in 2008, Paris is to help build atomic power reactors for New Delhi under which the French firm EDF will build six atomic reactors of 1650 MW each at Jaitapur, some 500 kms south off Mumbai, with National Power Corporation India Limited (NPCIL) as operator.
"The aim is to ensure free trade on international seas, tackle piracy and maritime terror. We decided to secure sea channels and build capabilities through engagements in bilateral as well as multilateral foras," she said.
On his part, the French minister said he was here to lay the groundwork for the visit of the French president which would take place early next year during the summit of the International Solar Alliance.
Describing his talks "very useful and substantive", he said, "On matters such as combating terrorism, maritime security, cooperation in the Indian Ocean - where France and India are two countries belonging to the Indian Ocean Rim - we have a complete commonality of views, which calls for the strengthening of our partnership."
The French minister also termed Indo-French strategic tie-up as "a partnership of trust based on democratic values" and "partnership of heart".
He said France was keenly desire to pursue and further strengthen the exceptional strategic partnership that has united India and France since 1998.
It was France's first strategic partnership in Asia and for 20 years it has been enriched and continues to be concretised from year to year, he added.
The visiting dignitary also talked about robust defence ties, saying the bilateral defence partnership is well known through the Rafale and Scorpne projects to mention only the most emblematic ones but it is far broader than that, similar to our cooperation in the Indian Ocean.
He also said the partnership for the planet was at the core of France's global diplomacy.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi and President Emmanuel Macron have expressed their desire to maintain the momentum created with the Paris Agreement on Climate Change and the founding of the International Solar Alliance.
The minister also invited Indian students, researchers and artists to visit France.
He will inaugurate 'Bonjour India' festival in Delhi and Jaipur, which will offer the best of this partnership of hearts through 300 events across 33 Indian cities.
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