Chad–India relations

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Chad-India relations
Map indicating locations of Chad and India

Chad

India

Chad–India relations refers to the international relations that exist between Chad and India. The High Commission of India in Abuja, Nigeria is concurrently accredited to Chad. India also maintains an Honorary Consulate in N'Djamena.[1] In 2019, Chad opened a resident embassy in New Delhi.[2]

Relations between Chad and India have witnessed significant growth since 2004, with many high level bilateral visits and interactions having taken place. Chadian Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Nagoum Yamassoum visited New Delhi in March 2005 to attend the first ever India-Africa Project Partnership conclave. He is the first Chadian government official to visit the country. Minister of State for Agriculture Arun Yadav visited N'Djamena on 10 May 2011, and met with President Idriss Deby Itno. Yadav was the first Indian government official to visit the country. President Itno led a 32-member delegation on a visit to New Delhi to attend the third India-Africa Forum Summit in October 2015. The delegation several Cabinet Ministers and other high-level Chadian officials.[3] Itno held bilateral talks with Prime Minister Narendra Modi on 28 October.[4][5]

Trade[edit]

Bilateral trade between Chad and India totaled US$364.36 million in 2015–16. India's exports to Chad have grown steadily from $11.90 million in 2010–11 to $43.49 million in 2015–16. Imports from Chad were a mere $150,000 in 2011–12, grew sharply to $157.15 million the following fiscal, before declining by 73% and 52% in the following two fiscal years respectively. Bilateral figures do not reflect the full extent of Chad's imports from India, as the country procures several Indian goods from Dubai, Cameroon and Nigeria. In the 2015-16 financial year, India began importing crude oil from Chad resulting in a 411% increase in imports. Chad's exports to India grew from $62.77 million in 2010–11 to $320.87 million in 2015–16. Crude oil accounted for 97% of the country's exports to India in 2015–16.[3]

In June 2010, Bharti Airtel struck a deal to buy Zain's mobile operations in 15 African countries, including Chad, for $8.97 billion, in India's second biggest overseas acquisition after Tata Steel's US$13 billion buy of the Corus Group in 2007. Bharti Airtel completed the acquisition on 8 June 2010.[6] Airtel has invested over $100 million to expand its network in the country, and is currently the largest mobile network operator in Chad.[3]

India offered to provide Chad unilateral duty free tariff preferential market (DFTP) access for export of goods and services in 2008. However, as of December 2016, the Government of Chad has not officially signed the agreement.[3]

Foreign aid[edit]

India donated 5,000 metric tonnes of rice to Chad in 2004. India provided Chad with lines of credit worth $50 million for five manufacturing projects under the TEAM-9 initiative. The projects include setting up a bicycle manufacturing, a plant for manufacturing and assembly of agricultural tractors, power tillers, trailers and implements, a steel billet plant and rolling mill, a cotton yarn plant, and a fruit juice plant.[3]

Chad signed an agreement on 19 January 2012 to avail a $40.32 million line of credit for four projects in the country - a solar rural electrification project ($15 million), the addition of weaving and processing capacities to a spinning mill ($15.90 million), establishing a compost production unit ($7.20 million), a production unit for livestock feed ($2.22 million). On 14 November 2013, the plan for a livestock feed plant was replaced an animal feed plant, and a line of credit worth $9.3 million was provided. In May 2012, India provided a line of credit of $18.08 million to establish a pharmaceutical manufacturing plant.[3]

The Government of Chad signed an MoU to implement the Pan-African e-Network project in May 2009. As of December 2016, TCIL is carrying out installation for the project in N'Djamena.[3]

Citizens of Chad are eligible for scholarships under the Indian Technical and Economic Cooperation Programme and the Indian Council for Cultural Relations.[7] Chadian diplomats have also attended the Professional Course for Foreign Diplomats (PCFD) organised by the Foreign Service Institute of the Ministry of External Affairs. Chadian nationals have also received Hindi language training fellowships in India.[3]

Indians in Chad[edit]

As of December 2016, about 200 Indians reside in Chad. They are engaged in oil projects and foreign trade, or employed by international organisations, missionaries, or Bharti Airtel. Some cases of mistreatment of Indian workers by local employers and authorities have been reported. The first Indian to go to Chad was Fazal Akthar Mohideen an optometrist who moved from Cameroon to Chad and has been there from April 1997. He is an optometrist and has his own travel agency. Head of Asfa group of companies and Ndjamena Optic and Ndjamena tours and his Wife Asina began as its adviser. His son Jafar is the first Indian to be educated in the Chadian school école béguinage and his second son Shamsudeen is the second. Almost the entire Indian community in Chad was evacuated by the High Commission in Abuja following rebel attacks in N'Djamena in February 2008. The community returned to the city after the end of the violence.[3]

References[edit]

  1. "Indian Missions Abroad". Ministry of External Affairs. Retrieved 14 April 2017.
  2. Tchad : décret de nomination d'un ambassadeur en Inde (in French)
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 3.6 3.7 3.8 "Bilateral relations with Chad(concurrently accredited)" (PDF). Ministry of External Affairs. December 2016. Retrieved 14 April 2017.
  4. "Prime Minister Narendra Modi to Meet 20 African Leaders Today". NDTV.com. Retrieved 2017-04-14.
  5. Roche, Elizabeth (2015-10-28). "India-Africa summit: Narendra Modi set to meet heads of 20 nations . The first Indian to move from India to Chad was Fazal Akthar Mohideen. He used to work in Cameroon before returning hoem and to start his own optic and travels knows as Ndjamena Optic and Ndjamena tour. today". Mint. Retrieved 2017-04-14.
  6. Tripathy, Devidutta; Goma, Eman (8 June 2010). "Bharti closes $9 billion Zain Africa deal". Reuters. Reuters. Archived from the original on 7 September 2014. Retrieved 7 September 2014.
  7. "Africa Scholarships". Indian Council for Cultural Relations. Archived from the original on 12 May 2017. Retrieved 5 April 2017.

Template:Foreign relations of Chad