Cuba in India

India and Cuba highlight potential to increase bilateral trade.

New Delhi, Mar 12 (Prensa Latina) India and Cuba agreed today that there is potential to increase bilateral trade, after the meeting of the Minister of Commerce and Industry, Piyush Goyal, and the Minister of Trade and Foreign Investment, Rodrigo Malmierca.

The Cuban side also expressed its willingness to favor the investment of Indian capital in Cuba, as well as joint projects in renewable energy and the pharmaceutical industry, according to the Cuban official on the social network Twitter.

In India, Minister of Foreign Trade and Foreign Investment of Cuba

New Delhi, March 9. Cuban Minister of Foreign Trade and Investment, Rodrigo Malmierca Díaz, arrived in India at the head of a delegation that includes the agriculture, renewable energy and biopharmaceutical sectors.

The Cuban minister and the group accompanying him arrived at New Delhi's Indira Gandhi International Airport from Doha, Qatar, where they participated in the 5th United Nations Conference on Least Developed Countries (LDCs).

Cuban poet Alex Pausides exchanged with Indian students and writers.

During the visit of Cuban poet Alex Pausides to India to participate in the International Conference on relations between Latin America and India, the poet visited the Jawaharlal Nehru University and the University of Delhi, where he held friendly exchanges with students of the two main educational centers of the country on the movement of literature and poetry in Cuba, as well as issues on the current situation of the island. 

Cuba present at National Conference regarding relations between Latin America and India.

Cuban poet Alex Pausides represented Cuba at the International Conference on relations between Latin America and India, "Connected Histories, Shared Present: Intercultural Experiences between Latin America, the Caribbean and India", held in New Delhi in February. The event was organized by the cultural institutions, the International Indian Center (IIC) and the Indian Council for Cultural Relations (ICCR), and was attended by leading writers and academics from Latin America and the Caribbean.

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