
India cannot ‘switch off its economy', says envoy to UK on Russian oil imports
Vikram Doraiswami
has dismissed the western criticism of New Delhi's oil imports from Russia and said a country can't "switch off its economy".
Doraiswami said many of India's European partners are also continuing to buy rare earth and other energy products from the same countries that they're "refusing to let us buy from". He was speaking to British radio station, Times Radio, last week after the PM's visit to London.
"Don't you think that that seems a little odd?" Doraiswami said.
When asked about India's "closeness" with Russia and President Vladimir Putin, he said New Delhi's relationship is based on a number of metrics.
"One of these is our long-standing security relationship that goes back to an era in which some of our western partners would not sell us weapons but would sell them to countries in our neighbourhood that use them only to attack us," the high commissioner said in an indirect reference to US-Pakistan military ties from the Cold War era.
He said India has an "energy relationship" with Russia, which is the result of "everybody else buying energy from sources that we used to buy from earlier".
"So we've been displaced out of the energy market largely, and the costs have gone up. We are the third-largest consumer of energy in the world. We import over 80% of our product. What would you have us do? Switch off our economy," Doraiswami said.
"We also see around us relationships that other countries maintain for their own convenience with countries that are a source of difficulty for us. Do we ask you to come up with a little test of loyalty?" he said.
India has called EU sanctions on Rosneft refinery in India as unilateral to which it does not subscribe.
On the Russia-Ukraine conflict, he said Prime Minister Narendra Modi has repeatedly said that "this isn't an era of war".
"He's made that point repeatedly, including with the president of Russia and with the president of Ukraine," he said.
"We are very keen for this terrible conflict to stop, as we are keen for conflicts across the world to stop," Doraiswami added.
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