Wednesday, December 17, 2025
ADVT 
National

Canada's Indian Community To Give Rock Star Welcome To Modi

Gurmukh Singh IANS, 15 Apr, 2015 12:44 PM
    The Indo-Canadian community is set to give a rock star like welcome to Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi who landed here on Tuesday for his three-day visit.
     
    Modi was welcomed by Canadian Multiculturalism Minister Jason Kenney and Indian High Commissioner Vishnu Prakash and a large number of Indo-Canadian leaders on his arrival at Ottawa airport from Germany.
     
    There is a palpable buzz in Canada about Modi's visit as he is the first Indian prime minister to come here in 42 years since Indira Gandhi’s visit in 1973. Canadian prime ministers have, however, been visiting India quite regularly.
     
    Modi arrived in Canadian capital Ottawa after completing his France and Germany sojourn.
     
    Bilateral trade and investment top the agenda of Modi’s talks with his Canadian counterpart Stephen Harper and CEOs of major Canadian companies. 
     
    In particular, Modi is wooing Canadian pension funds which hold over $600 billion. A deal may be clinched for first Uranium supplies from Canada’s Cameco under the nuclear deal signed by the two countries in 2010. 
     
    Though a breakthrough on the proposed free trade agreement is unlikely, the process is going to get the impetus during Modi’s talks with Canadian leaders. 
     
     
    Both sides showed some urgency to clinch the free trade accord as they had proposed to triple their bilateral trade to $15 billion by 2015, but both the targets have eluded them as Canada is reluctant on giving free access to Indian temporary workers and visitors and India is also wary of giving unhindered access to Canadian goods.
     
    The bilateral trade between India and Canada is still stuck in the region of $6 billion, much lower than Canada’s trade of over $60 billion with China.
     
    In fact, India accounts for just one percent of Canada’s foreign trade, with fertiliser, iron ore, wood, lentils and canola oil among its major export items to India.
     
    With Modi wooing investment for India’s infrastructure and making a pitch for his Make In India programme, both countries are likely to fast-track ratification of the investment treaty signed in 2012 to give safeguards to investors against unfair treatment.
     
    Major Canadian companies such as Bombardier, McCain Foods Ltd, Sun Life Financial Inc, BlackBerry, Brookfield Asset Management Inc., etc, have a presence in India. 
     
    Modi will impress upon Canadian investors about his government’s agenda to open more sectors to foreign investment. There is also buzz about an announcement by Modi for visa on arrival for Canadians.
     
    Apart from official discussions, Modi’s engagements with the 1.2 million-strong Indo-Canadian community include a Madison Square Garden-like 'concert’ at Toronto’s Ricoh Coliseum with a full house of 10,000.
     
    The newly formed National Alliance of Indo-Canadians (NAIC) is organising the event in which Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper will also speak.
     
    After his Toronto engagements, Modi will travel to Vancouver where he will visit the oldest Ross Street Sikh temple. He will also visit the Laxmi Narayan Temple in Vancouver’s neighbour city of Surrey which is home to the largest concentration of Indians in Canada. 
     
    Giving a typical Bollywood welcome to Modi in Toronto, Ottawa and Vancouver, choreographer Shiamak Davar’s troupe will perform in the three cities.
     
    Modi’s three-day visit ends with a dinner with the host PM in Vancouver.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Classes Cancelled At Quebec University After Vandalism And Clashes With Cops

    Classes Cancelled At Quebec University After Vandalism And Clashes With Cops
    MONTREAL — Classes in a building at a downtown Montreal university are cancelled for the day after students occupied it for several hours and ended up clashing with police.

    Classes Cancelled At Quebec University After Vandalism And Clashes With Cops

    Rogers Sees Drop In Customer Info Requests From Police, Security Agencies

    Rogers Sees Drop In Customer Info Requests From Police, Security Agencies
    OTTAWA — Rogers Communications says it saw a sharp drop in the number of requests for customer information from government and police agencies last year — a result of swelling public concern and a landmark court ruling on telecommunications privacy.

    Rogers Sees Drop In Customer Info Requests From Police, Security Agencies

    U.S. Sperm Bank Sued By Canadian Couple Says It Didn't Verify Donor Information

    U.S. Sperm Bank Sued By Canadian Couple Says It Didn't Verify Donor Information
    A U.S.-based sperm bank says it didn't verify the information of a donor that is at the heart of a lawsuit by a Canadian couple who allege they weren't told their donor was a schizophrenic with a criminal record.

    U.S. Sperm Bank Sued By Canadian Couple Says It Didn't Verify Donor Information

    Crews Work To Contain Fuel Spill In Vancouver's English Bay

    Crews Work To Contain Fuel Spill In Vancouver's English Bay
    VANCOUVER — A fuel spill has spread over areas of Vancouver's English Bay, coating waters in an oily sheen.

    Crews Work To Contain Fuel Spill In Vancouver's English Bay

    Taxpayers Not Made To Foot The Bill For Harper Makeup Artist: Government Source

    Taxpayers Not Made To Foot The Bill For Harper Makeup Artist: Government Source
    OTTAWA — The prime minister might have had his makeup done alongside Sen. Mike Duffy in 2010 on one of their many appearances together, but a government source says the taxpayer didn't pick up the tab for that type of service.

    Taxpayers Not Made To Foot The Bill For Harper Makeup Artist: Government Source

    Ontario Still Has Concerns About Prostitution Law Despite Constitutionality

    TORONTO — Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne says her government's review of Canada's new prostitution law may have found it to be constitutional, but it hasn't "entirely" alleviated her concerns about the law.

    Ontario Still Has Concerns About Prostitution Law Despite Constitutionality