India, Mauritius and Other Nations of IOR-ARC: Civil Services Mentor Magazine - October 2013

INDIA, MAURITIUS AND OTHER NATIONS OF IOR-ARC

India, Mauritius and other countries of the Indian Ocean Rim Association for Regional Cooperation (IOR-ARC) on 5 July 2013 agreed to encourage open regionalism to promote trade and minimise the barriers. The Communique issued after conclusion of the 2-day IORARC Economic and Business Conference in Port Louis urged member states to harmonise trade practices in line with international norms and take steps to minimise barriers. The communique, issued by Member States and Dialogue Partners of the IOR-ARC, was released at a joint press conference by Commerce and Industry Minister Anand Sharma and Mauritian Minister of Foreign Affairs, Regional Integration and International Trade Arvin Boolell. IOR-ARC members include Australia, Bangladesh, India, Indonesia, Iran, Malaysia, Mauritius, Singapore, South Africa, Thailand and UAE.

Background

The Indian Ocean Rim defines a distinctive area in international politics consisting of coastal states bordering the Indian Ocean. It is a region of much diversity, in culture, race, religion, economic development, and strategic interests. The countries vary in the size of their populations, economies, trade, and technological development and in the composition of their GDP. A number of sub-regions are evident, for example Southern and Eastern Africa, Gulf of Aden, Oman Sea, South-Asia, Southeast Asia, and Australasia. It also includes a number of regional organisations, such as ASEAN, GCC, SAARC, and SADCC. After the Second World War, the decolonisation process ended British hegemony in the Indian Ocean. Superpower rivalry in the region escalated, due to the strategic importance of the area. The common historical experience of European imperialism had left a lasting impression on the leaders of states in the Indian Ocean region - of a sense of shared identity. The rediscovery of the past littoral economic, social and cultural community, of an oceancentric regional co- perative grouping serving as a bridgehead between Africa, Asia and Australasia, therefore seemed only natural. In 1995, during a visit to India, President Nelson Mandela stated that the natural urge of the facts of history and geography should broaden itself to include the concept of an Indian Ocean Rim for socio-economic cooperation and other peaceful endeavors. Recent changes in the international system demand that the countries of the Indian Ocean shall become a single platform.

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