by Enrico Tibuzzi
(ANSA) - MUMBAI, NOV 28 - Italy's Ambassador to India Antonio
Bartoli said the arrival of the Italian Navy's training ship
Amerigo Vespucci in Mumbai coincides with an "historic moment"
amid an "unprecedented" intensity in bilateral ties in a turning
point for relations between Italy and India matured, after a
difficult period, over the course of five meetings that have
taken place in the past two years between Italian Premier
Giorgia Meloni and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi.
The last took place on November 18, when on the sidelines of the
G20 meeting in Rio a joint strategic plan was signed, opening up
new horizons.
"We are experiencing an historic moment", Bartoli told ANSA
during a visit to the training vessel of the Italian Navy docked
at the port of India's financial capital, which is today open to
the local public, together with Villaggio Italia, the itinerant
exhibition of national excellencies.
"It is the first time here for the Vespucci.
"But it is also a particularly important moment for relations
between the two countries: the level of bilateral relations has
registered an unprecedented intensity.
"A page has been turned" compared to the past, noted the
ambassador.
The priorities and objectives outlined in the agreement signed
in Rio, the ambassador also said, "must now translate into
concrete projects and results.
"Political dialogue, economy, security, defence, space, tourism,
energy transition, culture are sectors that present huge
perspectives".
Asked whether India was an alternative to China, Bartoli
observed that, "without easy shortcuts or simplistic recipes",
it is "a fact that this is the economy growing the most among
important countries", at about double the rate of the average
worldwide growth.
"Moreover, this is a country with a population with an average
age of 28 and that, until 2078, will see the under-25s outnumber
the over-65s.
"This means that in 2050 there will be 1.6 billion Indians while
the Chinese will have aged, decreasing to 1.2 billion",
continued the ambassador, describing the demographic trend as an
"incredible market opportunity".
However, he said, it is also a challenge.
India will become by 2027 the third world economy and by 2030
the third stock exchange; this will certainly not be enough to
solve the problem of inequalities.
"It will be necessary to develop the manufacturing sector, the
only one that can absorb this demographic growth with its
intensity of labour, which is something that high-tech and
services, today the driving sectors of the Indian economy,
cannot do".
The two governments, recalled Italy's diplomatic representative
to Delhi, have also signed an agreement on mobility "of mutual
interest, I would say a win-win.
"On the one hand, India needs to develop an industry that
absorbs an increasing number of workers as well as locate it
abroad.
"We are interested in the most specialized.
"And the agreement says we can bring to Italy qualified
personnel, provided they are trained in India, to deal with the
lack of professional figures on our job market.
"The first project we are trying to set up concerns nurses.
"We need 65,000 while India has one of the best professional
levels".
Issues including the recognition of degrees and the language
barrier will need to be solved.
However, "the road to follow in order not to let smugglers
decide who must reach Italy is this one", concluded Bartoli.
Meanwhile, ahead of the official opening ceremony on Friday, the
gates of Villaggio Italia and the gangway of the Vespucci have
opened to the Indian public which has arrived in large numbers
to admire 'the world's most beautiful' sailing ship and leading
Italian design and technological products.
The flow of visitors had as soundtrack the music played by the
band of the Italian Navy with a set that included the majestic
Vespucci and the Villaggio. (ANSA).
Vespucci in Mumbai historic moment says Amb. Bartoli
Villaggio Italia opens to public