Mauritius offers India 2 islands in effort to preserve tax treaty

By AFP
July 06, 2012

NEW DELHI: Mauritius has offered a couple of sun-drenched islands to India as part of a trade and investment deal. While the...

NEW DELHI: Mauritius has offered a couple of sun-drenched islands to India as part of a trade and investment deal. While the offer has been talked about for a while, Mauritius has revived it - at a time when it's very keen on persevering with the 1983 double-taxation avoidance treaty with India.

Mauritius foreign affairs and trade minister Arvin Boolell said that it was up to India to use the islands to its advantage. He said the "blue economy" had great potential. India could use North and South Agalega Islands (which are located 1,100 km north of Mauritius and have an official total area of 70 sq km) for setting up hotels and tourist resorts, for trade, marine studies, or for building a strategic presence in the Indian Ocean, official sources told TOI. North Agalega Island also has an airstrip.

In November 2006, TOI had first reported about preliminary discussions between the two countries for handover of Agalega Islands — which is closer to India than the African country —for development as a tourism and trade hub.

Next Story >>>
Advertisement

More From World