NEW DELHI — French President Francois Hollande began a three-day visit to India on Sunday that could push a multibillion-dollar deal for combat airplanes and closer cooperation on counterterrorism and clean energy.
Hollande landed in the northern city of Chandigarh where Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi joined him at official engagements and lauded France’s decision to invest $1 billion every year in India in various sectors.
Chandigarh was designed in the 1950s by Swiss-French architect Le Corbusier and is one of three places France has pledged to help develop as so-called “smart cities” - with clean water supplies, efficient sewage disposal and public transportation.
Hollande and French business leaders met with their Indian counterparts to boost bilateral trade, which in 2014 was $8.6 billion. New Delhi is also trying to encourage French companies to tap into India’s economic boom.
Modi in his speech said India was looking forward to French expertise in defense production, developing railways and waterways, and fighting global warming and terrorism.
