from the site :
The Diplomat
 
 
_India’s African  “Safari”_ 
(http://thediplomat.com/2012/12/04/indias-african-safari/) 
December 04, 2012
 
Although its interests in the continent are broadly similar,  India’s 
engagement with Africa differs significantly from China. Will it prove  
sustainable?
 
India’s engagement with Africa has grown remarkably over the past decade. 
Trade with Africa jumped from U.S. $3 billion in 2000 to $52.81 billion in  
2010-11 and is expected to exceed $90 billion by 2015. India has emerged as 
 Africa’s fourth largest trade partner, after the European Union, China and 
the  United States. Its cumulative investment in the continent exceeded $35 
billion  in 2011 in industries diverse as energy, pharmaceuticals, 
agriculture and  telecommunications. 
Close ties between India and Africa are not new. Trade has flourished 
between  East Africa and India’s west coast for centuries. India also supported 
Africa’s  struggle against colonial rule and apartheid, and its freedom 
movement inspired  the anti-colonial struggles of African countries, Ruchita 
Beri, an expert on  India-Africa relations at the Institute for Defence Studies 
and Analyses (IDSA)  in New Delhi told The Diplomat. Throughout the 1960s 
and 70s, India  worked closely with the newly liberated African countries to 
forge common  positions on global issues.  
However, New Delhi’s interest in Africa waned in the 1990s. With the end of 
 the Cold War, India was preoccupied with mending relations with the West 
and  establishing ties with the newly independent former Soviet republics in 
Central  Asia. As a result Africa moved to the margins of India’s foreign 
policy. 
Rapid economic growth and soaring energy requirements, however, forced 
India  at the turn of the new millennium to rethink its neglect of Africa. 
India imports 70% of its oil, much of it from the politically volatile 
Middle  East. Finding new suppliers to diversify its oil sources is crucial to 
its  energy security and Africa is an attractive option.  
Besides oil, Africa is rich in gold, diamonds, platinum, copper, manganese  
and uranium. India's diamond-cutting industry – the world's largest – 
depends on  rough diamonds from Africa, while uranium in Niger, Uganda and 
Tanzania is vital  for India's nuclear power industry. 
There are other reasons too for India’s renewed interest in Africa. Africa 
is  rich in votes at the UN General Assembly, which India needs when it 
pushes for a  seat in the Security Council. Realization of its strategic 
ambitions too hinge  on cooperation with Africa. India is keen to assert its 
naval 
power across the  Indian Ocean from Africa’s east coast to the western 
shores of Australia. This  has prompted it to step up naval cooperation with 
Africa’s Indian Ocean  littorals like Seychelles, Mauritius and Madagascar. 
Tackling problems like  piracy off Somalia’s coast too requires India to work 
with Africa. 
India’s interest in Africa is thus multifaceted although its focus is on 
the  economic dimension. 
Historically, India was active in Africa’s Anglophone countries and in East 
 Africa. It was the large Indian diaspora in countries like Kenya, Tanzania 
and  Mauritius that facilitated close economic relations. Over the past 
decade,  however, India is looking beyond East Africa. With oil and other 
natural  resources emerging as key drivers of its engagement, West Africa and 
South  Africa are the focus of its attention. Nigeria’s immense oil wealth has  
contributed to its emergence as India’s top trading partner in Africa,  
accounting for roughly 30% of India’s trade with the continent. 
India’s imports from Africa consist mainly of primary commodities (91% of 
its  imports from Africa in 2010). Oil accounts for 61% of Africa’s exports 
to India.  The continent also provides a market for India’s manufactured 
goods – over  two-thirds of African imports from India are manufactured goods 
such as  pharmaceuticals, machinery and transport equipment. 
The domination of oil and natural resources in India’s imports from Africa  
and of manufactured goods in its exports to the continent has drawn 
criticism  that India is indulging in a “neo-colonial grab” for Africa’s 
resources. Critics  liken its trade with Africa to that which the European 
powers 
engaged in with  their colonies. 
“This is an uninformed view,” argues HHS Viswanathan, a distinguished 
fellow  at the Observer Research Foundation in New Delhi and India’s former 
ambassador  to Nigeria and Cote d’Ivoire. “Africa of today is not the same as 
during  colonial times. When countries exploit the resources of Africa today, 
the terms  are set by the African nations and not by outsiders. The deals 
are mutually  beneficial.” 
Echoing this view, IDSA’s Beri said that India’s relationship with Africa 
is  “not a one-way street,” with benefits flowing to one side only. “India 
is  sharing its own development experience with Africa,” she said. It was 
its  services sector that spurred the Indian economy and India is now helping 
Africa  achieve a similar growth by building its services sector. 
“Capacity building is an important component of India’s engagement of  
Africa,” says Aparajita Biswas, head of the Department of African Studies at 
the  University of Mumbai. India is supporting institutional capacity building 
at the  pan-African, regional and bilateral levels. It is setting up scores 
of  institutions in areas as diverse as food processing, agriculture, 
textiles,  weather forecasting and rural development. A pan-African e-network 
linking  schools and hospitals across Africa with top institutions in India 
will make  Indian expertise in healthcare and education accessible to the 
African  people. 
Illustrating the mutually beneficial nature of India’s ties with Africa, an 
 official in India’s Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) drew attention to  
training in diamond cutting, polishing and grading that India is providing 
to  the people of Botswana. “While India’s diamond cutting industry has 
benefitted  from Botswana’s diamond roughs, India is enabling Botswana to move 
up the value  chain in the diamond business,” he pointed out. 
Similarly, while Africa provides a major market for India’s pharmaceutical  
industry – 14% of India’s $8 billion pharmaceutical exports in 2009 went 
to  Africa, “the role it has played in controlling the spread of HIV/AIDS and 
other  diseases by making treatment affordable cannot be ignored,” the 
official said.  Besides pharma companies like Ranbaxy are not just selling to 
Africa but have  set up production facilities there. 
India’s investments in African land have drawn criticism too. It has been  
accused of engaging in a “land grab,” especially in Ethiopia where Indian  
companies like Karturi Global, one of the world’s largest exporters of 
roses,  have leased vast tracts of land to cultivate cash crops. This could 
undermine  Africa’s food security, critics charge. 
“Land grab is too strong a term” to describe Indian companies’ cultivation 
on  Africa’s land, counters Viswanthan, “So far, the projects have 
benefitted both  parties,” he says. However, he cautions that such projects 
have to 
be  “constantly monitored for any adverse effects on local food security.” 
Parallels are often drawn between India and China’s African “safaris.”  
Indeed, their trade with Africa has grown at similar rates; India’s at a  
compounded annual growth rate of 24.8% and China’s at 26.3%. More importantly,  
access to natural resources and especially oil is the main driver of both 
Asian  giants’ engagement of the continent. 
There are important differences though. For one, India’s footprint in 
Africa  is small compared with that of China. Take their role in Africa’s trade 
for  instance. In 2011, India accounted for 5.2% of Africa’s global trade 
compared  with China’s 16.9%. Besides, unlike China’s investment in Africa, 
which is led  by state-owned companies, Indian investment is mainly driven by 
the private  sector. In another contrast with Chinese companies, India hires 
local laborers  while many Chinese companies bring Chinese laborers to 
their projects in  Africa. 
Indian officials admit that China’s aid-for-oil strategy, which involves  
extension of soft loans for massive infrastructure projects in return for  
African oil, used to impress them as it helped Beijing secure deals in its  
favor, according to the MEA official. This prompted India to follow the 
Chinese  strategy in some countries where it was seeking oil deals. However, 
India 
was  unable to match the aid the Chinese offered. It underscored the need 
for an  approach that built on India’s strengths, which ultimately resulted 
in India  focusing on capacity building in Africa. 
India is upbeat over its relations with Africa. It has reason to be. With  
regard to oil for instance, not only has its access to African oil grown  
significantly – Africa now accounts for 20% of India’s fuel imports – but 
also  it has been successful in acquiring equity in African oilfields, observes 
 Viswanathan. 
The question is how secure are its investments in Africa? Its experience in 
 Sudan underscores the need for caution. ONGC Videsh Ltd (OVL), the 
overseas unit  of India’s state-run Oil and Natural Gas Commission, invested 
$2.5 
billion in  oil exploration and production in an undivided Sudan. This 
investment came under  threat with South Sudan’s secession from Sudan in 2011, 
with three OVL blocks in  the Muglad Basin straddling the border between the 
two Sudans and one entirely  in South Sudan. This situation became especially 
precarious earlier this year  when Sudan forced South Sudan to halt oil 
production, resulting in massive  losses for OVL. 
As for allegations of neo-colonial exploitation, these have been leveled  
largely by the western media. Will such a view eventually be echoed by 
Africa,  potentially jeopardizing India’s presence there? 
India hopes that its capacity building, people-centric approach and efforts 
 to build a sustainable partnership with Africa will keep such allegations 
at  bay. 
Dr. Sudha Ramachandran is a political analyst based in Bangalore, India.  
She writes on South Asian political and security  issues.

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