India's first bullet train will connect Ahmedabad, the largest city in Gujarat, to Mumbai, cutting travel time from seven hours to less than three.
The project, which was launched here today by Modi and his Japanese counterpart Shinzo Abe in the packed Athletics Stadium, is expected to bring in employment, revenue and even international trade to both the cities.
Addressing the large crowd, Modi made it a point to bring in the flavour of Gujarat, where elections are due in the next few months.
The area between Mumbai and Ahmedabad would become a Shinkansen economic zone where trade will get a push, he added to roaring applause.
Modi, sometimes breaking into Gujarati during his Hindi speech, addressed his constituency by praising their art of bargaining.
"We Indians, specially Gujaratis, when we go to buy or sell anything, we always bargain, we take stock of every penny. When we go to buy a small bike, to take a loan, we visit 10 banks and calculate which bank is giving less interest. Then we calculate and we are happy even with half per cent less interest," he said.
Lauding Japan, he said the country was such a friend that it gave a loan of Rs 88,000 crore at 0.1 per cent interest for the project.
"The bullet train is in a way a big gift from Japan to India. It is in a way a project being constructed for free," the prime minister said.
The high-speed rail project between the two cities, about 500 km from each other, is expected to be completed by 2022.
Allaying fears that the new technology is for the rich only, Modi said it can also be used for empowerment of the poor.
"Our aim is to make technology so affordable through maximum use that it becomes associated with the life of the poor," he said, indicating that the bullet train will be affordable to all.
The Japanese prime minister said a strong India is in Japan's interest, and vice versa, and left no stone unturned to praise Modi and even Gujarat.
"I hope that in a few years when I come to Ahmedabad, I ride the Shinkansen train with Modi while chatting with him and viewing beautiful sights from the train's window," he said.
"My good friend prime minister Narendra Modi is a farsighted leader. And he took a decision two years ago to bring high speed rail in India and to create a New India," he said, adding that his country had decided to fully support Modi's vision, culminating in the progress of the project.
"When we add Ja of Japan and I of India, it makes 'Jai.' Jai Japan and Jai India--me and PM Modi will work together for this," he said, much in the manner of Modi himself.
For the opposition, Abe's visit to Gujarat and the bullet train project in particular is setting the stage for the BJP's high voltage campaign in the state.
The Congress raised questions over Abe's visit to Ahmedabad and Gandhinagar and not the country's national capital.
"With an election in Gujarat round the corner, it does raise a question, and I hope this is not the case, that a State visit is actually being used for political purposes because the manner in which it is structured is rather awkward to say the least," Congress spokesperson Manish Tewari told reporters yesterday.
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