Chief Justice of India Surya Kant has underlined that at a time of rising global instability and geopolitical stress, the India France partnership has become essential rather than optional, stressing that strong legal cooperation and dispute-resolution mechanisms are critical to sustaining international trade, innovation, and rule-based engagement.
Addressing the Indo-French Legal and Business Conference, the CJI traced the India France relationship beyond diplomacy into a mature, multi-layered partnership spanning defence, technology, trade, and sustainable growth. Highlighting the sharp rise in bilateral trade over the past decade, he framed the discussion against growing global uncertainty, where cross-border commercial activity increasingly faces legal and political friction. In this backdrop, Justice Kant emphasised that robust dispute-resolution frameworks, particularly arbitration and mediation, are central to maintaining confidence between international partners as India and France prepare for the Year of Innovation 2026.
Justice Kant observed that enduring partnerships depend on shared legal values and predictable dispute-resolution systems, noting that “the forces of disruption and geopolitical tension threaten to destabilise the very framework of international cooperation.” He stressed that the India France relationship rests on common commitments to democracy and the rule of law, and called for joint arbitration and mediation panels drawing from both civil and common law traditions.
Pointing to India’s legal framework, he reaffirmed the Supreme Court’s consistent pro-arbitration approach, where courts have held that arbitration clauses must be construed liberally and procedural objections should not defeat genuine intent, thereby strengthening party autonomy and commercial certainty.
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