Toronto: India's relations with Canada Sunday turned a full circle- from one of suspicion and unease to a strategic partnership.
Canada, which had led India's nuclear isolation in the mid-1970s and late 1990s, is now the ninth nation with which New Delhi has a peacetime atomic energy pact, opening the doors for bilateral nuclear commerce on the lines India has with the US.
The pact, paving the way for Canadian firms to take part in India's $40 billion nuclear energy business over the next 10 years, was inked after a meeting between Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and his Canadian counterpart Stephen Harper.
'The civil nuclear agreement that we have signed breaks new ground in the history of our cooperation in this sector,' Manmohan Singh told reporters at a joint press conference with Harper.
'It reflects the change in international realities and will open new doors for mutually beneficial cooperation in nuclear energy,' he said, alluding to how the global community now looks at India compared with when New Delhi conducted its nuclear tests in 1998.