Tag: talks

  • Revealed: most of EU delegation to crucial fishing talks made up of fishery lobbyists

    Revealed: most of EU delegation to crucial fishing talks made up of fishery lobbyists

    [ad_1]

    More than half of the EU’s delegation to a crucial body of tuna stock regulators is made up of fishing industry lobbyists, the Guardian’s Seascape project can reveal, as Europe is accused of “neocolonial” overfishing in the Indian Ocean.

    The numbers could shed some light on why the EU recently objected to an agreement by African and Asian coastal nations to restrict harmful fish aggregating devices (FADs) that disproportionately harvest juvenile tuna. Stocks of yellowfin tuna are overfished in the Indian Ocean.

    FADs are large floating rafts that attract fish by casting a shadow, making it easy for vessels to catch massive numbers of tuna. They contribute to overfishing of yellowfin because they attract juveniles as well as endangered turtles, sharks and mammals that get caught up when the devices are encircled in purse seine nets.

    In February, a proposal by Indonesia and 10 other coastal states in the region – including India, Sri Lanka and Pakistan – for a 72-day ban on FADs used by purse seine vessels was adopted by the Indian Ocean Tuna Commission (IOTC), the main regulatory body. With a two-thirds majority vote, the measure was welcome by conservationists as a “huge win” for yellowfin and other marine life.

    Retailers including Tesco, Co-op and Princes have previously issued calls for tough action to preserve and rebuild the $4bn yellowfin industry, while this year Marks & Spencer warned EU officials that FADs are a major cause of yellowfin tuna overfishing, and that they cripple future stocks.

    The devices, typically made of plastic, also pollute the ocean and small island states when lost or discarded.

    But earlier this month the EU, which is the largest harvester of tropical tuna in the region, objected to the measure, effectively exempting it from the restrictions. Critics described the move as “neocolonialism”, pointing to the influence of industry lobbyists from France and Spain in ignoring the will of many coastal nations.

    Artisanal fishers in Gazi Bay, Kenya, unload the latest catch
    Artisanal fishers in Gazi Bay, Kenya unload the latest catch … but they complain that large foreign vessels are draining the Indian Ocean of yellowfin tuna. Photograph: Brian Inganga/AP

    At the last annual IOTC meeting, the EU’s 40-strong delegation was made up of at least 24 industry lobbyists listed as “advisers”, Guardian analysis shows. At the smaller special session on FADs this year, at least half of the 10 EU delegates were from the tuna industry.

    The percentage of lobbyists in the EU’s official delegation has been rising since 2015, when yellowfin tuna was declared overfished by IOTC scientists. A report in January by Bloom, a French NGO, calculated that the annual number of industrial lobbyists within the EU delegation has more than doubled in recent years, rising from an average of eight in 2015 to 18 in 2021.

    A European Commission official said, in a statement, that industry representatives have “no decision-making responsibility” at the IOTC, unlike commission officials. Policymaking at the IOTC relies on the European Green Deal objectives, the conservation of biodiversity and sustainability of stocks, and was more complex than the number or type of delegates, said the official. The EU tabled the largest number of proposals in 2022, including yellowfin management and FAD management, the statement said, adding that this was not what you might expect if “commercial interests dominated the EU position”.

    Concerns over the European industry’s influence over Indian Ocean coastal states deepened following two proposals by Seychelles to the IOTC containing changes that appear to have been made by Europêche and other industry groups.

    Jess Rattle, the head of investigations at the Blue Marine Foundation, said the EU’s actions flew in the face of commitments made at the historic high seas treaty, agreed last month to protect biodiversity. “The EU has entirely abandoned this sentiment in favour of plundering the Indian Ocean’s already overfished stocks, safe in the knowledge that, once all the fish are gone, its highly developed fleet can simply move to another ocean, unlike the many coastal states left behind with nothing.”

    More than two-thirds of countries accepted the ban. But Seychelles, which has 13 EU-owned tuna vessels flagged to its state, also objected to the FAD proposal, along with Comoros, Oman, Kenya and the Philippines.

    “Their objections can be seen as a form of neocolonialism by the EU,” said Rattle. “This measure was voted in at the IOTC, not just by a majority but a two-thirds majority. By objecting, and stirring up objections from their vassal states, the EU are making it clear they’re going to continue to fish the way they want to, regardless. That is disgraceful.”

    Referring to the changes to Seychelles’ proposals by Europêche, Rattle said: “The industry appears to be making changes to proposals submitted by Seychelles. They clearly have power over this coastal state.”

    Jeremy Raguain, a Seychellois conservationist and a negotiator for Seychelles in the high seas treaty talks, said his country is highly dependent on the EU, its largest trading partner, and on tuna exports. “We need a thriving tuna industry for economic survival, but it is environmentally unsustainable and only profitable through huge subsidies,” he said.

    “Seychelles is in a tight spot. Indonesia has taken the right stance, but Seychelles is not Indonesia. There is neocolonial pressure.”

    An official in the European Commission said the EU had already submitted a proposal “with a strong scientific basis” to reduce the number of FADs but that the IOTC “unfortunately” agreed to an alternative from Indonesia. The adopted proposal “lacks a scientific basis and would prove impossible to implement”, added the spokesperson, claiming it could have a “very substantial” negative impact on many fishers and communities.

    A spokesperson for Europêche , which represents fishers in the EU as well as tropical tuna producers organisations – including the Europêche Tuna Group (ETG) – confirmed that some of its boats fly Seychelles’ flag.

    “Seychelles consult ETG, as they also consult NGOs and other industries’ groups, on their proposal projects,” the spokesperson said. “It is then up to its government representatives to follow or not the different comments they receive.”

    The Guardian approached authorities in Seychelles for comment but did not receive a response by publication time.

    [ad_2]
    #Revealed #delegation #crucial #fishing #talks #fishery #lobbyists
    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • SCO Defence Ministers Meeting: Rajnath likely to hold talks with Chinese counterpart

    SCO Defence Ministers Meeting: Rajnath likely to hold talks with Chinese counterpart

    [ad_1]

    New Delhi: India, as the Chair of Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) in 2023, will host the SCO Defence Ministers’ Meeting here on April 28, the Defence Ministry said on Tuesday.

    Defence Minister Rajnath Singh is expected to hold bilateral talks with his Chinese counterpart Gen Li Shangfu. Before the SCO meet, the 18th round of India-China Corps Commander level talks held on Sunday, but it failed to make headway on the contentious issue of the Depsang Plains and de-escalation along the Line of Actual Control (LAC) in eastern Ladakh.

    The repeated attempts by China’s People’s Liberation Army (PLA) to violate the LAC, leading to tension in Ladakh, spurred the institution of the Corps Commander-level meetings.

    MS Education Academy

    While the two sides agreed on mutual withdrawals from Pangong Tso, Gogra, and Hot Springs, the Depsang Plains and Demchok remain points of contention and tension.

    Now all eyes are now on the visit of the Chinese Defence Minister.

    Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO), established in 2001, comprises Kazakhstan, China, Kyrgyzstan, Pakistan, Russia, Tajikistan, and Uzbekistan besides India. Apart from the member states, two observer countries – Belarus and Iran – will also be participating in the SCO Defence Ministers Meeting.

    The Defence Ministers will discuss amongst other issues matters concerning regional peace and security, counter terrorism efforts within SCO and an effective multilateralism.

    According to the Defence Ministry officials, the theme of India’s Chairmanship of SCO in 2023 is ‘SECURE-SCO’. India attaches special importance to SCO in promoting multilateral, political, security, economic and people-to-people interactions in the region. The ongoing engagement with SCO has helped India promote its relations with the countries in the region with which India has shared civilisational linkages, and is considered India’s extended neighbourhood.

    SCO pursues its policy based on the principles of sovereignty and territorial integrity of nations, non-interference in internal affairs, equality of all member states and mutual understanding and respect for opinions of each of them.

    Rajnath Singh is likely to hold bilateral meetings with other Defence Ministers of participating countries on the sidelines of the meet, the officials added.

    [ad_2]
    #SCO #Defence #Ministers #Meeting #Rajnath #hold #talks #Chinese #counterpart

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Ukraine in talks with Russia over ‘all-for-all’ prisoner exchange

    Ukraine in talks with Russia over ‘all-for-all’ prisoner exchange

    [ad_1]

    Kiev: Kyrylo Budanov, chief of the Main Intelligence Directorate of the Ukrainian Defense Ministry, has said that Ukraine is in talks with Russia over an “all-for-all” prisoner exchange, local media reported.

    Speaking in an interview with RBC-Ukraine media outlet, Budanov said that the two countries “in principle are getting closer” to an agreement, envisaging the release of all captives by the two parties, Xinhua news agency reported.

    Since the start of prisoner exchanges, Russia has freed more than 2,220 Ukrainian captives, he noted.

    MS Education Academy

    According to the Ukrainian authorities, Ukraine and Russia have carried out more than 40 prisoner swaps since the first exchange in March 2022.

    Subscribe us on The Siasat Daily - Google News

    [ad_2]
    #Ukraine #talks #Russia #allforall #prisoner #exchange

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Eastern Ladakh row: India, China hold 18th round of military talks

    Eastern Ladakh row: India, China hold 18th round of military talks

    [ad_1]

    New Delhi: India and China held a fresh round of high-level military talks on Sunday with a focus on resolving the remaining issues in eastern Ladakh as the border row enters the fourth year, people familiar with the matter said.

    The 18th round of military talks took place ahead of Chinese Defence Minister Li Shangfu’s visit to India next week to attend a key meeting of the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation being hosted by New Delhi under its presidency of the grouping.

    Sunday’s military talks came around four months after the last round of the dialogue between the senior Army commanders of the two sides.

    MS Education Academy

    The talks were held at the Chushul-Moldo border meeting point on the Chinese side of the Line of Actual Control (LAC) in eastern Ladakh, the people familiar with the developments said.

    It is learnt that the Indian side insisted on resolving the issues at the remaining friction points of Demchok and Depsang in eastern Ladakh as soon as possible.

    The Indian delegation at the dialogue was led by Lt Gen Rashim Bali, Commander of the Leh-based 14 Corps that takes care of security along the LAC in the Ladakh sector.

    In line with a decision taken at the 16th round of military talks, the two sides carried out disengagement from Patrolling Point 15 in the Gogra-Hotsprings area in September last year.

    The Corps Commander-level talks were instituted to resolve the eastern Ladakh row. India has been maintaining that its ties with China cannot be normal unless there is peace in the border areas.

    The eastern Ladakh border standoff erupted on May 5, 2020 following a violent clash in the Pangong lake area.

    The ties between the two countries nosedived significantly following the fierce clash in the Galwan Valley in June 2020 that marked the most serious military conflict between the two sides in decades.

    As a result of a series of military and diplomatic talks, the two sides completed the disengagement process on the north and south banks of the Pangong Lake and in the Gogra area.

    [ad_2]
    #Eastern #Ladakh #row #India #China #hold #18th #military #talks

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • UK Parliament panel criticises lack of information on FTA talks with India

    UK Parliament panel criticises lack of information on FTA talks with India

    [ad_1]

    London: A cross-party Parliament committee in charge of scrutinising the UK government’s trade affairs on Friday strongly criticised the lack of information provided around Britain’s ongoing negotiations with India for a free trade agreement (FTA).

    The House of Commons International Trade Committee, which is set to be dissolved next week to make way for a new Business and Trade Committee in keeping with the creation of the new merged department by Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, said in many cases it gleaned more detail on the talks from reports in the Indian media often citing unnamed Indian government officials.

    India and the UK are negotiating an FTA to enhance the bilateral trading relationship worth 34 billion pounds in 2022, with the eighth round of negotiations concluding in New Delhi at the end of last month and the next round expected in the coming weeks.

    MS Education Academy

    “Parliament must be kept more fully informed about the negotiations. It cannot be right that we have obtained more details from the Indian media than we have from the UK government,” said Scottish National Party MP Angus Brendan MacNeil, Chair of the International Trade Committee.

    “A trade deal with India is an opportunity to enhance our trading relationship with the fifth-largest economy in the world. But this agreement must not come at any cost.

    “As our report highlights, there are important issues at stake, including potential impacts on NHS drug costs, human and labour rights, gender equality and pesticide standards,” he said.

    In its report entitled UK trade negotiations: Agreement with India’, the committee welcomed the Sunak-led government’s decision to not set any new deadline for the deal after former prime minister Boris Johnson’s “widely trailed deadline to get a deal with India done by Diwali” last year.

    “We welcome the fact that the government is no longer putting arbitrary deadlines on trade negotiations. While the Diwali date was unrealistic, it is positive that government has adopted an approach that evaluates the benefit of the trade deal before finalising any agreement,” the report notes.

    One issue highlighted in the report is the need to reconcile the UK government’s wish to see India’s patent laws tightened to benefit UK drug companies with the need to maintain the state-funded National Health Service (NHS) access to cheap generic drugs produced in India.

    The Committee also notes possible implications from the deal for standards and checks regarding the quality and safety of goods, including food products and medicines.

    Its report suggests the possibility of attaching to any trade liberalisation in the deal the condition that India implement UN and International Labour Organisation human rights conventions, and showing that goods meet environmental sustainability and animal welfare requirements.

    The Committee said that its analysis of the UK-India talks is being placed on the record by the member MPs for both the government and the successor Business and Trade Committee to pick up and implement.

    [ad_2]
    #Parliament #panel #criticises #lack #information #FTA #talks #India

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Little evidence that China is seriously approaching its India talks with a sense of goodwill: US

    Little evidence that China is seriously approaching its India talks with a sense of goodwill: US

    [ad_1]

    Washington: Reiterating that the United States supports a resolution of the Indo-China border dispute through a negotiated settlement and direct conversations between the two countries, Biden Administration’s point person for South and Central Asia on Thursday said the US sees little evidence that Beijing is seriously approaching these talks with a sense of goodwill.

    “Our position on India’s border dispute with China is long-standing. We support a resolution of that border dispute through a negotiated settlement and through direct conversations between the two countries,” Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asia Donald Lu told PTI in an interview.

    “Having said that, we see little evidence that the Chinese government is seriously approaching these talks with a sense of goodwill. What we see is the opposite. We see provocations that happen on the line of actual control on a pretty regular basis,” Lu said in response to a question.

    MS Education Academy

    India, the senior State Department official said, can count on the United States’ standing with India as it faces the challenge of its northern neighbour.

    “We demonstrated that resolve in 2020 during the Galwan crisis, and we continue to find opportunities to cooperate with India on information but also on military equipment, exercises and that will go forward into the years ahead,” he said.

    A top American think-tank Centre for a New American Security in a report last month said the increased prospect of India-China border hostility has implications for the United States and its Indo-Pacific strategy.

    As the United States considers the role that India will play in the Indo-Pacific and how to maximise US-India cooperation to meet security challenges in the region, US policymakers must closely monitor and be prepared to respond quickly to future India-China border crisis, said the report authored by Lisa Curtis who served as deputy assistant to the president and NSC senior director for South and Central Asia from 2017 to 2021 and senior defence analyst Derek Grossman.

    The report recommended the Biden Administration that to help deter and respond to further Chinese aggression along the border with India, the United States should elevate Indian territorial disputes with China on par with Beijing’s assertiveness against other US allies and partners in the Indo-Pacific and ensure this is reflected in all national security related documents and speeches.

    “Offer India the sophisticated military technology it requires to defend its borders and initiate co-production and co-development of military equipment. Assist India in strengthening its maritime and naval capacity, and conduct joint intelligence reviews with India to align assessments of Chinese plans and intentions along the LAC and enhance coordination with Indian officials on contingency planning in the event of a future India-China conflict,” it said.

    It urged the US to establish or support an official or unofficial organisation charged with collating unclassified commercial satellite imagery on the position of PLA troops along the LAC and disseminate these images routinely for public consumption. “Criticise Beijing’s efforts at land-grabbing in multilateral forums, including the UN, Shangri-La Dialogue, G20, and East Asia Summit.

    Message Pakistan and enlist help from Islamabad’s other important partners to convey similar points about the need to stay neutral in the event of a potential future India-China border flare-up. And be prepared to extend full support to India, in the event of another border crisis or conflict,” recommended the think-tank in its report.

    [ad_2]
    #evidence #China #approaching #India #talks #sense #goodwill

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Turkish FM says holding talks with both sides in Sudan for truce

    Turkish FM says holding talks with both sides in Sudan for truce

    [ad_1]

    Ankara: As the violent unrest continues to rage in Sudan, Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said that negotiations are on with the two warring parties in a bid to reach an ultimate ceasefire.

    Addressing reporters on Wednesday, the Minister said: “We are negotiating with both parties. We are negotiating to stop the conflict. We are on the field with our friends.

    “We are currently meeting with the Vice President. We’re also meeting with the commander of the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) to stop the war.”

    MS Education Academy

    Cavusoglu further said they expected a ceasefire to be reached on Thursday ahead of Eid al-Fitr on Friday.

    He also noted that Turkey will evacuate its citizens from Sudan after its airspace opens on Thursday.

    The fighting that erupted on the morning of April 15 between the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) in Kharotum has so far killed about 270 people and injured more than 2,600 others, with gunfire and explosions still heard across the capital city.

    The violence, which is a result of a bloody tussle for power between Sudan’s military leader Abdel Fattah al-Burhan and RSF head Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo, also known as Hemedti, has also spread to other areas in the country, including in Darfur to the west.

    As a result of the unrest, thousands of civilians have fled Khartoum and foreign nations are trying to evacuate their citizens, amid a sixth day of fierce fighting.

    Witnesses reported people leaving the capital in cars and on foot on Wednesday morning, as gunfire and deafening explosions rocked the city.

    The exodus followed Tuesday’s collapsed ceasefire between the warring factions.

    (Except for the headline, the story has not been edited by Siasat staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

    [ad_2]
    #Turkish #holding #talks #sides #Sudan #truce

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • McCarthy seeks to reassure Wall Street on stalled debt talks

    McCarthy seeks to reassure Wall Street on stalled debt talks

    [ad_1]

    image

    Rebuffed by President Joe Biden since February on that point, McCarthy and his team are now attempting to demonstrate their seriousness by drafting their own debt limit proposal — one that includes a half-dozen attempts to slash federal spending or loosen regulations in a bid to boost the economy.

    “We are seeing in real time the effects of reckless government spending, record inflation and the hardship it causes,” McCarthy said inside the colonnaded walls of the New York Stock Exchange on a gloomy morning as a smattering of progressive protestors chanted out front. “Rising interest rates, supply chain shortages, instability in the banking system and uncertainty across the board.”

    The speaker on Monday repeatedly blamed Biden and Democrats for driving higher inflation through excess spending, reiterating that any hike in the debt limit should be offset by significant spending cuts. He said Republicans would pass their own bill within weeks but offered no further details on which cuts his conference wants to see.

    Some early drafts of those plans have been shared with GOP members in recent days, but party leaders stress that nothing is final until the entire conference can weigh in.

    McCarthy vowed that in the next few weeks, “the House will vote on a bill to lift the debt ceiling into next year, save taxpayers trillions of dollars, make us less dependent on China, and curb high inflation — all without touching Social Security or Medicare.”

    The bill is almost certain to include some of the GOP’s recently-passed energy priorities, including a new way to streamline the permitting process, as first reported by POLITICO.

    Much of the discussion over what that bill will look like is expected to kick off this week, with Congress returning from a holiday recess to a sense of rising anxiety in both parties over the debt standoff. Even so, McCarthy sought to reassure the markets during his speech, saying defaulting on the nation’s existing debt “is not an option.”

    “I have full confidence that if we limit our federal spending, if we save taxpayers money, if we grow the economy, we will end our dependence on China, we will curb inflation, and we will protect Medicare and Social Security so America will be stronger,” McCarthy said — repeatedly invoking former President Ronald Reagan, a favorite among many Wall Street traders.

    The California Republican ripped Biden for doing “nothing” on the federal debt and annual deficits, saying that as a senator, Biden “voted for spending reforms attached to debt limit increases four times.”

    Democrats have dismissed McCarthy’s initial proposal — which includes steep spending cuts, stricter work requirements for social programs and a new deregulatory push — as going nowhere in a divided government. They argue that Republicans should cleanly lift the borrowing limit and avoid risky negotiations with potentially dire consequences for the global economy.

    “Speaker McCarthy continues to bumble our country towards a catastrophic default, which would cause the economy to crash, cause monumental job loss and drastically raise costs to the American people. He went all the way to Wall Street and gave us no more detail,” Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer told reporters after the speech.

    Schumer said he would be willing to meet with McCarthy after the Republicans decide on a specific package of spending cute. He also stressed that while he would be willing to discuss future spending levels, he wouldn’t entertain tying that conversation to the debt limit.

    “No more facts, no new information at all. I’ll be blunt. If Speaker McCarthy continues in this direction, we are headed to default,” Schumer said. And as for McCarthy’s push for a one-year debt ceiling increase — which would punt the issue until the heat of the 2024 campaign season — Schumer called it a “terrible idea.”

    Wall Street traders and executives continue to believe that House Republicans and the White House will eventually cut a deal ahead of a deadline sometime this summer, avoiding a default. Republicans and Democrats clashed over the debt limit through much of former President Barack Obama’s tenure, including the first downgrade of U.S. debt by ratings agency Standard & Poor’s in 2011. (That crisis led to 10 years of spending austerity, known as budget caps, that only just ended.)

    Still, the path to a deal remains unclear. McCarthy on Monday said that a “no-strings-attached debt limit increase cannot pass” — which happens to be exactly what Democrats have unwaveringly demanded.

    But even a GOP-only measure may not be easy to pass in the House. Republicans can only lose four votes on the floor, meaning that virtually all of McCarthy’s conference must line up behind a package that stands no chance of becoming law in its current form.

    Already, that opening offer on the debt limit is running into some potential political pitfalls — including an expiration date that would tee up another high-stakes fiscal fight just months before the 2024 presidential election.

    McCarthy “again failed to clearly outline what House Republicans are proposing and will vote on, even as he referenced a vague, extreme MAGA wish list,” White House spokesperson Andrew Bates said, accusing the GOP of increasing costs for families and taking “food assistance and health care away from millions of Americans” with their emerging proposal.

    “A speech isn’t a plan, but it did showcase House Republicans’ priorities,” Bates said.

    Burgess Everett contributed to this report. Ferris reported from Washington.

    [ad_2]
    #McCarthy #seeks #reassure #Wall #Street #stalled #debt #talks
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Shettar holds talks with Congress leaders, may join party: Sources

    Shettar holds talks with Congress leaders, may join party: Sources

    [ad_1]

    Bengaluru: Former Karnataka chief minister Jagadish Shettar is in talks with senior Congress leaders after resigning from the Karnataka Assembly over his candidature not being reconsidered by the BJP for the May 10 election, Congress sources said.

    The sources told PTI that Shettar flew from Hubballi to Bengaluru on Sunday in a special helicopter and held discussions with Congress general secretary (Karnataka in-charge) Randeep Singh Surjewala, Congress state chief D K Shivakumar, former minister M B Patil and veteran Congress leader Shamanur Shivashankarappa.

    Shettar may join Congress on Monday, the sources added.

    MS Education Academy

    The six-time Hubballi-Dharwad Central MLA resigned from the Assembly on Sunday after his talks with Chief Minister Basavaraj Bommai and two Union ministers Pralhad Joshi and Dharmendra Pradhan the previous night failed.

    Shettar alleged that he has been humiliated by denying him a BJP ticket and added that there was a systematic conspiracy against him in the ruling party.

    Subscribe us on The Siasat Daily - Google News

    [ad_2]
    #Shettar #holds #talks #Congress #leaders #join #party #Sources

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Nitish meets Yechury, other Left leaders amid Oppn unity talks

    Nitish meets Yechury, other Left leaders amid Oppn unity talks

    [ad_1]

    New Delhi: Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar met CPI(M) General Secretary Sitaram Yechury, CPI leader D. Raja and other leaders here on Thursday amid talks of opposition unity.

    Nitish Kumar is on a three-day visit to New Delhi to bring the non-BJP parties together to fight against the BJP in the 2024 Lok Sabha elections.

    Yechury, while speaking to the media, said that his party and the Left have always believed that democratic parties with secular ideology need to unite.

    MS Education Academy

    He said: “Today, we have to save our country, our constitution and democracy. For this, there is a need to defeat the BJP and the present government at the Centre. Our basic objective is to stop the division of anti-BJP votes. For this all parties need to come together.”

    He stated that a joint meeting of all the parties would be held soon wherein the whole outline would be decided.

    Yechury said: “We have to save the Constitution today and for that we have to defeat the BJP in the 2024 elections. Talks are on with other political parties as well… The front that is going to be formed will always be there after the elections.”

    Yechury tweeted: “With Bihar CM Shri Nitish Kumar to carry forward the efforts to unite secular democratic parties to safeguard the Indian Republic, Constitution and Democracy, severely assaulted by the BJP & Modi govt. Defeat the BJP in order to save India & people’s livelihoods.”

    Commenting on the seat-sharing formula, Yechury said that the political alliance will be decided by the CPI(M) according to the circumstances in the states. He added that seats will be distributed as per the political situation in different states.

    Citing the example of Kerala, he said that the BJP has no hold there, so the competition will be between the Congress and the Left parties, but in the states where the BJP has to be fought, the opposition parties will coordinate on the seats.

    [ad_2]
    #Nitish #meets #Yechury #Left #leaders #Oppn #unity #talks

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )