Pakistan trade delegation seeks better bilateral ties

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Prime VIP
New Delhi/Mumbai: In a sign of improving bilateral ties, Pakistan's Commerce and Trade Minister Makhdoom Ameen Fahim will begin a five-day visit to India from Mumbai Monday.
He will be the first Pakistani minister to visit India's financial hub since terrorists attacked the city nearly three years ago, plunging bilateral ties to a new low.
Fahim will be accompanied by an 80-member delegation comprising the elite of Pakistan business.
The visit is aimed at promoting bilateral trade with a strong possibility of Pakistan announcing a step forward on the Most Favoured Status (MFN) for India. The two sides are also expected to focus on liberalising the visa regime for businessmen.
Taj Mahal function
Fahim will address an India-Pakistan business conclave Tuesday at the iconic Taj Mahal hotel in Mumbai that bore the brunt of assaults by terrorists.
Top CEOs from Indian and Pakistani companies are expected to highlight business opportunities and synergies between the two countries. Fahim's visit builds on the positive atmosphere generated by the talks between foreign ministers of India and Pakistan in June this year, during which the two sides unveiled a host of steps to boost cross-Kashmir trade and travel.
Fahim will hold talks with his Indian counterpart Anand Sharma in New Delhi on September 28. He is also expected to call on Prime Minister Manmohan Singh.
Ahead of the crucial talks, India is hopeful that Pakistan will grant MFN to it or at least move from the positive to negative list of goods that it does not want to import from India.
Easing of visa regime
India had granted MFN to Pakistan way back in 1996. Pakistan has given access to 1,940 product lines on its positive list and maintains 12,000 on the negative list.
The two ministers are also expected to focus on streamlining procedures for business visas and address issues related to custom duties and inclusion of new products in the trade list.
India and Pakistan decided to resume their dialogue process in February after a hiatus of more than two years.
A study by the New Delhi-based Indian Council for Research on International Economic Relations estimates that, given reciprocal concessions, bilateral trade between India and Pakistan could reach $14.3 billion
 
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