UK should play equal role as India at CHOGM, says UK leader

Press Trust of India  |  London 

can play a significant role in building up relationships within and with at the upcoming Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM), the of the in Britain has said.

The meeting will be attended by in on April 19-20.

Sir also called on the UK, which is the current Chair-in-Office of the Commonwealth, to play a modest role, which is at par with countries like

I think it is very important that Britain plays a modest role [at CHOGM] and doesn't try to dominate. There is no appetite for bringing back the Empire. It should play an equal and constructive role with other countries like India, said Cable.

Describing as a major economic power, he added: is now emerging as the third or fourth major economy in the world, so what it does in terms of trade and investment has a major impact on the rest of the world. It could play a very significant role in building up relationships within and with Africa, because there is an important Indian diaspora there.

The 74-year-old veteran, who worked as an in the Secretariat in the 1980s and recalls his first CHOGM in when was Prime Minister, sounded a note of caution over expectations from the organisation.

The is a useful organisation, good for networking and practical cooperation but it is not a unified political body, never will be. It is not a trade grouping and it never will be, he said.

The former business in the and within the country's political circles also dismissed prospects of major post-Brexit trade agreements with countries outside the (EU), like India, as poor.

The governments have several times tried to approach for special relationships and the Indian view has been that we have to have something in return; notably better visa arrangements, to which the has not offered anything, he said.

I don't think anybody in Britain believes that it would be possible to negotiate trade agreements that remotely compensate for the loss of access to the EU, he added.

Cable, who is currently leading his party's campaign for the local to be held on May 3 across Britain, urged voters to turn out and vote as it would be seen as a vote on the wider issue of Brexit.

Local elections always tend to have a lower turnout than national elections, but turning out an voting and particularly voting does matter. It will be seen as a vote on the Brexit issue, even though it's a local election, their vote does count, he said.

The pro-Liberal Democrats, which failed to make significant gains in the 2017 snap under the leadership of Cable's predecessor Tim Farron, now hope to win the argument in favour of a referendum on the final Brexit deal.

We have to persuade people that it [Brexit] is not inevitable and we have to persuade people that there is a practical way of stopping it, and that's to demand a referendum or vote on the final deal, said Cable, who believes the local election results will show that the British public opinion is moving in that direction.

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First Published: Sat, April 07 2018. 21:35 IST