India thanks Switzerland for MTCR support, seeks financial transparency law

August 31, 2017 04:40 pm | Updated 04:44 pm IST - NEW DELHI

Swiss President Doris Leuthard and Prime Minister Narendra Modi during a meeting at the Hyderabad House in New Delhi on August 31, 2017.

Swiss President Doris Leuthard and Prime Minister Narendra Modi during a meeting at the Hyderabad House in New Delhi on August 31, 2017.

India on Thursday thanked Switzerland for its support in global multilateral organisations. Welcoming the visiting Swiss president Doris Leuthard, Prime Minister Narendra Modi sought greater cooperation to ensure bilateral financial transparency and thanked the Swiss government for its support to India’s membership bid for the Missile Technology Control Regime (MTCR).

“Globalisation and disarmament are of extreme importance for both Switzerland and India. We are really thankful to Switzerland for its support to us on Missile Technology Control Regime,” Prime Minister Modi said speaking in Hindi and sought greater cooperation with Switzerland within the framework of India-EU cooperation.

India became an MTCR member last year and made a serious bid for membership of NSG. In both the initiatives, Switzerland supported India. Prime Minister Modi recollected his visit to the country last year in the run up to the plenary session of NSG and urged closer continued cooperation in this sphere.

Mr Modi also sought Swiss support in ensure transparency in investments and said, “Transparency in financial transactions is an issue of worry to stop black money, hawala transactions and fund for terrorism. Our cooperation continues with the Swiss to ensure automatic sharing of information. We welcome Swiss investments and work has begun on a new bilateral investment treaty.”

Mr Modi also noted that Switzerland has recognised traditional medicinal discipline of Ayurveda and sought greater cooperation to promote this field in Switzerland. “India is committed to clean energy and infrastructural development,” Prime Minister Modi said highlighting some of his government’s key policies.

Both sides also signed two major agreements on railways following which the Swiss president said, “India is playing an important role in global political agenda. We can learn from each other.”

Emphasising her government’s commitment to financial transparency, the Swiss leader said, “We have accepted automatic exchange of information on financial issues. Hopefully, our parliament will pass it by the end of the year. We have strongest laws against money laundering and therefore we hope that the first exchange of information can begin by 2019.”

Ms Leuthard, also expressed her country’s commitment to the Paris agreement and said that the challenge lies in implementing this international agreement on national level and said, “We both believe in rule of law and share common values which will help our future collaborations.”

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