India’s apex business body leads CEO delegation to Saudi Arabia

A Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry delegation meets members of the Federation of Saudi Chambers in Riyadh on Feb. 19, 2024. (FICCI)
Short Url
Updated 20 February 2024
Follow

India’s apex business body leads CEO delegation to Saudi Arabia

  • Federation’s delegation comprises 17 CEOs, government officials
  • Meeting with Saudi ministers, commerce body, Public Investment Fund

NEW DELHI: The Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry is leading a delegation of CEOs to Saudi Arabia this week as India’s businesses aim to play a role in the Kingdom’s mega projects and take bilateral economic relations to “another level.”

Saudi Arabia-India ties gained new momentum last year throughout India’s presidency of the G20 and after the state visit of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman in September, during which officials signed an accord to boost mutual investment.

India’s apex business body is taking the high-level delegation, comprising over a dozen Indian CEOs and government officials, to follow-up on the agreement and to boost bilateral trade relations.

“We have 17 CEOs cutting across diverse industry sectors, so this is one of the highest, most high-powered delegation to Saudi Arabia,” the FICCI’s Secretary-General S.K. Pathak told Arab News.

The delegation is visiting Saudi Arabia from Feb. 18 to 21 and has already held talks with the Saudi Arabia’s Investment Minister Khalid Al-Falih, Energy Minister Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman and members of the Saudi-India Business Forum.

“There are two aspects — one is what Indian companies can do, (what kind of) investment in Saudi Arabia, and what Saudi companies can do in India … basically whatever is the bilateral trade and how we can take it to another level.”

The Indian CEOs joining the FICCI are also scheduled to meet with representatives from the Federation of Saudi Chambers and the Public Investment Fund during their trip to Saudi Arabia. Their visit to the multibillion-dollar NEOM smart city will be the first by an Indian delegation.

“Indian companies are playing a large role in the NEOM city projects and this will become even larger. This is just the beginning,” Pathak said. “The entire NEOM city is phased over a trillion dollars, the Indian companies will get a large share of that.”


Panama court annuls Hong Kong firm’s canal port concession

Updated 3 sec ago
Follow

Panama court annuls Hong Kong firm’s canal port concession

  • The Supreme Court found the laws which allowed CK Hutchison Holdings to operate two of the five ports of the canal ‘unconstitutional’
PANAMA CITY: The Panamanian Supreme Court on Thursday annulled the concession allowing Hong Kong-based CK Hutchison to operate ports at the Panama Canal, a year after US President Donald Trump threatened to seize the crucial passageway claiming China controlled it.
The Supreme Court found the laws which allowed CK Hutchison Holdings to operate two of the five ports of the canal “unconstitutional,” according to a court statement.
The lawsuit to cancel the concession was brought before the Panamanian high court last year on allegations that it was based on unconstitutional laws and that the Hong Kong business was not paying taxes.
Panama Ports Company — a CK Hutchison Holdings subsidiary — currently manages the ports of Cristobal on the canal’s Atlantic side and Balboa on the Pacific side.
That arrangement was automatically renewed in 2021 for another 25 years.
The case came after Trump threatened just days into his second term last year to take back the canal — built by the United States and handed to Panama in 1999 — as he said China was effectively “operating” it.
CK Hutchison Holdings is one of Hong Kong’s largest conglomerates, spanning finance, retail, infrastructure, telecoms and logistics.
It has sought to sell the Panama Canal ports to a consortium led by US asset manager BlackRock.