Advertisement
Advertisement

State councillor signs milestone IT deal with India

Chen Zhili praises her hosts' software industry, calling for close co-operation

State Councillor Chen Zhili signed a landmark agreement in New Delhi yesterday for collaboration in information technology.

Ms Chen, the most senior Chinese science official to visit India, and Kapil Sibal, India's minister for science and technology, also pledged to co-operate in space and pharmaceutical research, disaster management, renewable energy and biotechnology.

The two countries have also set up the first joint steering committee for scientific co-operation, chaired by Ms Chen and Mr Sibal. Its first meeting is scheduled to take place in Beijing next year.

Ms Chen praised India's advanced computer industry during a visit to Bangalore - India's Silicon Valley - and called on China and India to work closely together.

She met executives of Bangalore-based Infosys, India's best-known software firm, which is setting up a software development facility in Shanghai.

Mr Sibal said that as 'India is No1 in terms of software and China is No1 in hardware, we can together become No1 in IT'.

Ms Chen is due to call on Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and Congress party leader Sonia Gandhi on her three-day visit.

She is the second state councillor to visit India in quick succession. Last month, Tang Jiaxuan paid a highly publicised visit which boosted bilateral ties and apparently cleared the path for a visit by Premier Wen Jiabao to India early next year.

A Chinese official told the Indian Express that Beijing wanted to increase scientific co-operation with India and South Korea.

Welcoming the technology deal, Indian Chamber of Commerce secretary-general Nazeeb Arif said: 'China is strong in hardware, their facilities and their abilities and their costs are such that they are already dominant in a large part of the manufacturing arena.

'India is a major leader in software, we have a lot of things going for us - quality, productivity and, of course, cost effectiveness.'

Analysts said trade and economic co-operation between the two nuclear neighbours had suffered immensely because of a festering border dispute and China's military links with India's regional rival, Pakistan.

Significantly, Taiwan's National Science Council has just announced plans to open a science and technology division in New Delhi, according to the Taipei Times. The newspaper reported that staff from the council would collaborate with Indian researchers in fields including energy, aerospace, information technology and communications.

Post