Hayashi said there has been progress on India-Japan initiatives in new sectors, such as cyber and space.
By: Shubham Ghosh
JAPANESE foreign minister Yoshimasa Hayasi on Friday (28) said in New Delhi that India is an “indispensable” partner in achieving a free and open Indo-Pacific and that Tokyo wants to deep cooperation with New Delhi in all areas to expand their special strategic and global partnership.
Complimenting India’s focus on the Global South, Hayasi said the call for upholding the free and rules-based international order may sound like a mere slogan unless there is adequate commitment to addressing the challenges that the developing nations are facing.
The Japanese diplomat, who is currently on a two-day visit to New Delhi, was speaking at the India-Japan Forum, convened by Ananta Centre, a non-partisan, not-for-profit organisation based in the Indian capital, and the ministry of external affairs.
Hayashi said there has been progress on India-Japan initiatives in new sectors, such as cyber and space, adding that discussions towards the realisation of “substantial cooperation” in the areas of defence equipment and technology are underway.
“At a time when there are many pressing challenges, including Russia’s aggression against Ukraine, Japan and India fully share the necessity to lead the world to cooperation, rather than to division and confrontation,” Hayashi said in the presence of his Indian counterpart Subrahmanyam Jaishankar.
“The free and open international order based on the rule of law is key to realising such a world,” he said in comments that came against the backdrop of the Russian invasion of Ukraine and China’s growing military muscle-flexing in the Indo-Pacific region.
Elaborating on the concept, Hayashi said “free” means each country is free to make decisions based on its own sovereignty and “open” means respect for principles, including inclusiveness, openness and diversity.
“It is vital that we refrain from imposing values or excluding certain countries. This concept is especially crucial for smaller countries. In coordination with India, Japan intends to materialise such a concept through realising a ‘Free and Open Indo-Pacific’ or FOIP,” he said.
In his comments, Jaishankar described Japan as India’s natural partner. In March, Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida announced Tokyo’s new plan for an FOIP in New Delhi.
“This fact itself is a reflection of the critical importance Japan places on India, as your nation is an indispensable partner in achieving FOIP, a Free and Open Indo-Pacific,” Hayashi said.
Referring to the G7 summit in Hiroshima in May, he said the leaders of the grouping and invited countries, including India and Ukraine, agreed that unilateral attempts to change the status quo by force cannot be tolerated anywhere in the world.
The Japanese foreign minister said Japan’s FOIP makes it clear that South Asia is one of the key regions. On India’s G20 presidency, Hayashi said Tokyo is very much eager to continue working hand-in-hand with India towards the success of the New Delhi summit of the grouping in September.
(With PTI inputs)