K. Male'
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06 Oct 2024 | Sun 08:45
President Dr. Mohamed Muizzu
President Dr. Mohamed Muizzu
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Muizzu's India trip
Pres. to visit Mumbai, Bangalore for business talks during India trip
The visit, commencing on Sunday, will conclude on October 10
Muizzu’s visit is also expected to pave the path to further boost cooperation
Muizzu will sit down for talks with the neighboring’s country’s president
Audio of the News

President Dr. Mohamed Muizzu will be visiting Bangalore and Mumbai to take part in business-related discussions and events as part of his official trip to India.

This was revealed by the High Commission of India in Maldives.

The Indian HC revealed in a statement that this is the president’s first bilateral visit to India since assuming office as the eighth president of Maldives in November 2023.

The visit, commencing on Sunday, will conclude on October 10.

As part of his visit, Muizzu will sit down for talks with the neighboring’s country’s president.

He will also engage in discussions with Prime Minister Narendra Modi on bilateral, regional and international issues of mutual interest.

The high commission’s statement goes on to read that Maldives is India’s key maritime neighbor in the Indian Ocean Region (IOR) and holds a special place in PM Modi’s vision of ‘SAGAR’ (Security And Growth for All in the Region) as well as India’s ‘neighborhood first policy’.

Further, the high commission noted that the Maldivian leader’s visit after the recent visit of the External Affairs Minister Dr. Subrahmanyam Jaishankar to the Maldives mirrors the significance India attaches to its relations with Maldives.

Muizzu’s visit is also expected to pave the path to further boost cooperation, and the strong people-to-people ties between the two countries.

Muizzu, who was at the forefront of the ‘India Out!’ campaign led by the then-opposition Progressive Party of Maldives (PPM) and People’s National Congress (PNC) coalition against India, has been working to maintain close ties with India since assuming office.

The Maldivian leader’s India trip carries the purpose of “resetting” the soured relations between the two countries, due to the ‘India Out!’ campaign.

Muizzu made an official visit to India in June this year to attend the swearing-in ceremony of PM Modi and his Council of Ministers.

Even after coming to power, some senior political figures in the incumbent administration made highly derogatory posts on social media about India’s PM, which further soured relations between the two countries.

Further, this even led to a significant drop in the number of Indian tourists visiting the island nation.

The President’s Office in early September revealed that Muizzu is scheduled to make a quick trip to the neighboring country at a time the Maldives is facing significant economic challenges.

Indian media earlier reported that Muizzu’s China-leaning government has cancelled the Joint Hydrographic Survey Agreement that the Maldives made with India back in 2019 and ordered the withdrawal of 85 military officials who were operating three aircrafts gifted by the Indian government.

These actions have been described as efforts by the Muizzu administration to show that Maldives is “not” dependent on India.

Despite these measures, Indian media reports that relations between the two neighboring countries have been improving over the course of the past couple of months.

As such, Indian media outlets have reported that during EAM Jaishankar’s visit back in August, Muizzu himself had stated that “India is the closest country to the Maldives and an invaluable partner”.

As part of EAM Jaishankar’s visit, Maldives and India signed an agreement to introduce the "Unified Payments Interface" (UPI) system to the Maldives.

Indian media outlets recently reported that India extended the deadline for repayment of the USD 50 million Treasury Bill issued as budgetary support to the Maldives, to help the Maldives avoid defaulting on its Sukuk bond.

This was the second rollover the government of India has granted to the Maldives this year and is followed by the first rollover of a USD 50 million Treasury Bill on 13 May 2024.

While the U.S. credit rating agency Fitch Ratings has warned that the Maldives could go bankrupt due to unpaid debts, India is among the two countries from which the Maldives has borrowed the most foreign debt. The other country being China.

Although the government has stated that they have received a "green signal" that these two countries will provide easier terms for the loans taken, the government has not confirmed that these arrangements have been finalized.

Last updated at: 4 hours ago
Reviewed by: Mariyam Uhaamath
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