Macron courts Modi
French President Emmanuel Macron and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi visit the ITER (International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor) in Saint-Paul-les-Durance, near Marseille, southern France. Photo: AFP
French President Emmanuel Macron and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi visited southern France with a packed schedule on Wednesday, fostering a relationship that Paris sees as an alternative to great power rivalries.
Macron took Modi for dinner in the picturesque southern town of Cassis on Tuesday, before Wednesday's visit to the Mediterranean coast and France's second-biggest city, Marseille.
They began the day with a homage to Indian soldiers who died in France during World War I at the Mazargues military cemetery south of Marseille. They then inaugurated India's new consulate general in Marseille, an event that drew a small crowd of cheering Indians.
Then it was time for business, with a visit to global sea freight company CMA CGM.
Both leaders have been discussing a project called the India-Middle East-Europe Economic Corridor (IMEC), a railway and maritime corridor between India and Europe via the Middle East destined to rival China's Belt and Road Initiative.
"We see the relevance of (the) IMEC project," Macron said during the visit. "Marseille can be clearly the entry point for the whole European market."
At the end of a French-Indian business forum, Macron had already praised IMEC as a "fabulous catalyst" for "concrete projects and investment". Paris also hopes to sell billions of dollars worth of Rafale fighter jets to India's navy, as well as submarines of the Scorpene class.