KUALA LUMPUR: Trade ministers from India and Malaysia are likely to meet on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum’s annual meeting in Davos next week amid a palm oil spat, a Malaysian government spokesman said.
Hindu-majority India has repeatedly objected to Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad speaking out against its policies which critics say discriminate against the Muslims.
Malaysia, a Muslim-majority nation, is the second biggest producer and exporter of palm oil and India’s restrictions on the refined variety imposed last week have been seen as retaliation for Mahathir’s criticism. India’s trade minister, Piyush Goyal, denied on Thursday that the government was trying to hit out at Malaysia in particular.
The row between nevertheless pushed benchmark Malaysian palm futures to its biggest weekly decline in more than 11 years.
No agenda has been set for the proposed meeting between Goyal and his Malaysian counterpart Darell Leiking on Friday, the spokesman for Malaysia’s Ministry of International Trade and Industry said, adding the request for a meeting had come from India. An Indian government source said a meeting was likely. Malaysia did not want to escalate the spat with India by talking of any retaliation for now, after Mahathir’s media adviser called for tighter regulations on Indian expatriates and products, instead wanting to use diplomacy.
A separate Indian government source said it was important for New Delhi and Malaysia to talk.
“We too have a lot to lose in Malaysia, there are 2 million Indian-origin people there,” the source said. There were a total of 117,733 Indian nationals registered as foreign labour in Malaysia as at June 2019, accounting for nearly 6 percent of the total foreign workforce in the country. Ethnic Malaysian-Indians are the third-largest community in the Southeast Asian country.
Another reason for frosty ties between the countries is the continued presence of controversial Indian Islamic preacher Zakir Naik in Malaysia, said one of the sources.
Naik, who faces charges of money laundering and hate speech in India, has lived in Malaysia for more than three years and has permanent residency in the country. He denies the Indian accusations. The sources declined to be identified as they were not authorized to talk to the media.