London, British Prime Minister David Cameron today said he will
discuss the ongoing import ban on Indian mangoes with the country's new Prime
Minister when he makes his official phone call next week.
Cameron was responding to
a question by senior Indian-origin Labour MP Keith Vaz in the House of Commons
in London.Vaz noted that he would have his first conversation with any new
Indian leader after the results of the Indian elections are announced on May
16.Cameron responded: "This is a very serious issue. The European Union
has to look on the basis of the science and the evidence and there are concerns
about particular cross contamination in terms of British crops and British
interests so we have to make sure that is got right.
"But I understand
how strongly he feels and how strongly the Indian community in this country
feels and indeed I look forward to discussing it with the new Indian prime
minister." Vaz, who has been campaigning over the issue and raised the
subject at the weekly Prime Minister's Questions in the Commons, urged Cameron
to reverse the ban which would cost firms millions of pounds."Will he do his best
to reverse this ban so we can keep the special relationship with India which
his predecessors and we have worked so hard to maintain, and so we can have our
delicious mangoes once again," he said.Cameron thanked the Leicester East
MP for the special delivery of Alfonso mangoes at Downing Street last week as
part of his efforts to raise awareness on the issue of the EU's decision to ban
imports of the fruit.The "temporary ban", supported by the UK's
Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra), will remain in force
until December 2015 after authorities in Brussels found consignments infested
with fruit flies that they fear could damage European salad crops.The ban,
which began last Thursday, also includes aubergines, two types of squash, and a
type of leaf used in Indian cooking.
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