Cameron, who had a meeting with Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, also utilised his short visit to India to allay the concerns of students looking to pursue education in the UK, saying there was no limit on the number of Indian students wanting to go there. He, however, said the UK needed to keep a tab on immigration.
Cameron, who is on his way to attend the CHOGM summit in Colombo, said he respected Singh's decision to not attend the meeting starting tomorrow.
The main focus during Singh-Cameron talks at the Prime Minister's Race Course residence was on trade ties with the British leader maintaining there has been "extraordinary progress" on trade and investment since his first trip here.
The two leaders also shared a strong view on Sri Lanka over the human rights situation there.
Later, in a tweet after his meeting with Singh, Cameron said they agreed that extraordinary progress on trade and investment has been made since 2010.
Noting that investments on both sides have also progressed satisfactorily, the leaders "felt that there was a need to take this process further through increased interaction in various fields and regular steps and measures to continue this positive momentum," sources said. British exports are up by 25 per cent in 2013, while Indian exports to the U.K. Have increased by 10 per cent.
Cameron also backed India for a permanent seat in the United Nations Security Council.
"The UN ought to include India in the Security Council as a permanent member," Cameron told an interactive session with students of the Indian Institute of Management in Kolkata.
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