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Modi's Bastille Day visit stirs controversy in France

13 July 2023 18:37

India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi is visiting France to attend the country's annual July 14 Bastille Day national festival as guest of honour.  

The visit comes at a significant moment as the two countries celebrate 25 years of their strategic partnership marked by civil nuclear, space and defence cooperation, DW reports.

In recent years, the partnership has expanded to areas such as energy and countering cyberterrorism. French President Emmanuel Macron's office has said Modi's presence and the participation of Indian forces in the Bastille Day parade would mark a "new phase in the strategic relationship."

"India and France have consistently been strong partners. It's a historical relationship that stretches back decades, precedes Modi and is much deeper than just business ties," said Jean-Luc Racine, senior fellow at the School for South Asian Studies in Paris. "It has a hugely important defence and security dimension."

That refers to deepening naval and security cooperation between Paris and New Delhi in the Indo-Pacific, where France has a string of islands and a vast maritime exclusive economic zone. The relationship is mainly driven by shared concerns about China's rising influence in the region.

France is also India's second-largest weapons supplier after Russia, and the war in Ukraine has prompted New Delhi to accelerate its efforts to diversify its sources of military gear away from Moscow.

Reports suggest the two countries could announce new deals for the naval version of French Rafale fighter jets, which are tailored for use on aircraft carriers, and three Scorpene-class submarines during Modi's visit.

“Unavoidable nature” of India-France ties

Some point out that the global context of Modi's visit to France is just as important.

India is chairing the Group of 20 (G20) — a club of the world's leading advanced and emerging economies — this year and Modi, who has deftly balanced ties with both the West and Russia, is courted by all sides despite not condemning the Russian invasion of Ukraine and boosting oil imports from Moscow.

In many ways, France sees India as the perfect ally to bridge the divisions revealed and amplified by the Russian military aggression.

In a briefing this week, the Elysee Palace spoke of the "unavoidable nature" of the partnership with India, which it said is now the world's fifth-largest economy and France's second-largest economic partner in Asia.

A Rafale jet performs a demonstration flight in Paris

Reports suggest that India and France could announce a new deal for the naval version of French Rafale fighter jets, which are tailored for use on aircraft carriers

"There's a high degree of trust and comfort level between India and France and ideological convergences. Both countries highly value an independent line of action and thinking," Harsh Pant, from the New Delhi-based think tank Observer Research Foundation, told DW.

"The way India has positioned itself, its diplomacy and its global outreach, there is a sense that India represents a large number of countries whose voices are not being heard on existential issues like rising, food, fertilizer and energy prices as a result of the war," he said.

"India could help France and the West to reach out to a large part of the world where there is a seeming disconnect right now."

Why some criticise Macron's move to invite Modi

But not everyone in France is welcoming Modi with open arms.

"India is a friend. But Prime Minister Narendra Modi is far-right and violently hostile to Muslims in his country," Jean-Luc Melenchon, head of the opposition radical left La France Insoumise or France Unbowed Party, tweeted last month.

"He is not welcome on July 14, a festival of liberty, equality, fraternity that he disdains."

The head of the Green Party (EELV), Marine Tondelier, said the choice of Modi as guest of honour was a "grave political error" by Macron.

"It has to be reminded that since Narendra Modi came to power in 2014, India, which is usually called the largest democracy in the world, has kept regressing when it comes to human rights and fundamental freedoms," Tondelier wrote in an article in French newspaper Liberation.

A Scorpene-class submarine operated by the Indian Navy

India is reportedly also looking to buy three Scorpene-class submarines

Modi's government has been accused of stifling the media, with India slipping 11 places to 161 out of 180 countries in the World Press Freedom Index released by the Paris-based Reporters Without Borders in May.

In the same month, the United States Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF) recommended for the fourth year in a row that India's government be added to a religious freedom blacklist.

"It's either totally ignorant of the internal political context of India or totally cynical to invite Mr Modi as guest of honour of the Republic of France on the occasion of the most symbolic day of the year," Tondelier wrote.

"A wrong message"

The criticism is rare in France, which doesn't have a sizeable Indian diaspora. But, on a recent afternoon, a small group of people prepared posters in a basement in Paris, saying "Not Today Mr Modi! Bastille Day is the day of freedom" and "no to Modi's extreme right agenda."

They plan to hold a protest in central Paris on the eve of Modi's appearance at the military parade.

"Bastille Day represents a certain ethos and values that are under attack in India," Shailendra, a resident of Paris, told DW. "Inviting Modi sends a wrong message."

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