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India cannot sacrifice economic strength to comply with US sanctions: FM Nirmala Sitharaman
FM Sitharaman said the government has expressed its view to the United States.
NEW YORK: India wants to comply with global sanctions, including US sanctions on Venezuela and Russia, but also needs to maintain its own strength and strategic interests, Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman said in an interview on Tuesday.
The United States in January imposed the toughest sanctions yet on Venezuela`s oil industry. The move has scared away some global customers, but with few alternative suppliers of heavy oil, Indian refiner Reliance Industries Ltd has been buying Venezuelan crude from Russian major Rosneft.
The company is set to resume direct oil loadings in the South American nation after a four-month pause.
Sitharaman said the government has expressed its view to the United States.
"In specific issues which are critical for India`s strategic interests, we have explained to the United States that India is a strategic partner for the United States of America and you want a strategic partner to be strong and not weakened," she said.
"We value the strong partnership with the USA, but we should equally be allowed to be a strong economy," she added.
The International Monetary Fund earlier on Tuesday lowered its outlook for Indian growth in 2019, citing weaker-than-expected domestic demand. The US-China trade war will cut 2019 global growth to its slowest pace since the 2008/09 financial crisis, the IMF said.
India`s gross domestic product grew at its weakest pace since 2013 between April and June, stoking expectations of further stimulus.
"Global headwinds ... are getting stronger by the day," Sitharaman said. Asked about further fiscal stimulus, she said: "I have not closed the door" on that.
New Delhi has been trying to boost domestic growth through an infrastructure package and a new loan programme organised with the banking sector that has doled out loans worth over 80,000 crore (8.7 billion pounds), she said.
The Finance Minister also defended the government`s recent move in Jammu and Kashmir in August during which it scrapped Article 370 that gave special status to J&K.
Since then the government has shut off phone networks, imposed curfew-like restrictions in some areas to maintain law and order.
The removal of the constitutional article that granted special status to Jammu and Kashmir will boost the region and the country`s economic potential, she said.
For decades before government's recent actions, women, scheduled castes, and nomadic tribes were denied human rights in Kashmir, Sitharaman said. "Where was the global community`s human rights concern at that time?" she asked.