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SUMMARY: Indian PM Narendra Modi’s Bilateral Meetings on Final Day of G20 Summit

India took over the G20 Presidency from Indonesia on Wednesday.

November 17, 2022
SUMMARY: Indian PM Narendra Modi’s Bilateral Meetings on Final Day of G20 Summit
On the sidelines of the G20 Summit, Indian PM Narendra Modi (left) met with the leaders of Australia, the UK, Singapore, Italy, France, and Germany.
IMAGE SOURCE: ASSOCIATED PRESS

Indian Prime Minister (PM) Narendra Modi landed in Bali on Monday for the G20 Leaders’ Summit. The next day, he met with the leaders of the United States and Indonesia and addressed the Indian diaspora in Bali. On Wednesday,  India took over the presidency of the group from Indonesia on Wednesday. It will begin its year-long tenure at the start of next month.

Modi also held bilateral meetings with the leaders of Australia, the United Kingdom (UK), Singapore, Italy, France, and Germany on Wednesday. Below is a summary of those meetings.

Australia

Modi and his Australian counterpart Anthony Albanese discussed regional and global developments of mutual interest, including Indo-Pacific security, climate action, and India’s coming G20 presidency.

The pair celebrated the “excellent state of relations” and frequent “high-level interactions” between India and Australia under their Comprehensive Strategic Partnership and expressed interest in deepening cooperation in defence, trade, education, clean energy, higher education, and training and capacity building.

In a press conference after their meeting, Albanese affirmed that ‘upgrading’ their trade relationship is “very important” and revealed that he will visit India in March and again later in the year for the next G20 summit. He noted that a business delegation will accompany him on his trip this coming march and also said that Modi will visit Australia next year for the annual Quad leaders’ summit.

United Kingdom (UK)

Modi also held his first in-person meeting with newly-appointed British PM Rishi Sunak. According to a press release by the British government, Sunak celebrated the “living bridge” between the two countries and expressed gratitude for Indians’ “overwhelming response” to his appointment.

They discussed collaboration on issues such as trade, mobility, security, defence, and security and also spoke of the need to broaden cooperation in multilateral forums like the Commonwealth and G20.

Like in their telephonic conversation a few weeks ago, Sunak expressed his interest in expediting negotiations on a free trade agreement, which the UK said “has the potential to unlock investment and increase jobs in both our countries, as well as expanding our deep cultural links.”

The pair celebrated the two countries’ “wide-ranging” Comprehensive Strategic Partnership and spoke of the progress in realising Roadmap 2030 for Future Relations, which the two sides agreed to last May as part of a wider goal of doubling bilateral trade by 2030.

Sunak also vowed to work together on global challenges such as the Ukraine war.

Singapore

Singaporean PM Lee Hsien Loong and Modi celebrated the two countries’ Strategic Partnership and their frequent high-level ministerial and institutional engagements via forums such as the India-Singapore Ministerial Roundtable in New Delhi last year.

Modi lauded Singapore as a critical player in India’s ‘Act East’ policy, which seeks to promote economic, strategic, and cultural relations with countries across the Indo-Pacific.

Lee and Modi discussed regional and global developments, including the need to enhance ASEAN-India cooperation. To this end, he welcomed Singapore’s role as its country coordinator for ASEAN-India relations from 2021-2024.

In fact, ASEAN and India elevated their Strategic Partnership to the level of Comprehensive Strategic Partnership just last week and agreed to expedite the review of the ASEAN-India Trade in Goods Agreement (AITIGA). Officials also spoke of the need to operationalise the Myanmar-Thailand Trilateral Highway and further expand it to Laos, Cambodia, and Vietnam. Furthermore, they emphasised on the importance of cooperation via other regional frameworks, such as the Indian Ocean Rim Association (IORA), Bay of Bengal Initiative for Multi-Sectoral Technical and Economic Cooperation (BIMSTEC), Indonesia-Malaysia- Thailand Growth Triangle (IMT-GT), Singapore-Johor-Riau (SIJORI) Growth Triangle, Brunei Darussalam-Indonesia-Malaysia- Philippines East ASEAN Growth Area (BIMP-EAGA), Mekong-Ganga Cooperation (MGC), and Ayeyawady Chao Phraya-Mekong Economic Cooperation Strategy (ACMECS).

On the heels of this meeting, Modi and Lee expressed their commitment to expanding trade and investment ties in fintech, renewable energy, skill development, health, and pharmaceuticals.

Modi welcomed Singaporean investment in the green economy, infrastructure, and digitalisation, and urged it to “take advantage of India’s National Infrastructure Pipeline, Asset Monetisation Plan, and the Gati Shakti Plan. 

Italy

Modi met his Italian counterpart Giorgia Meloni for the first time since her appointment last month as the country’s first female PM. They discussed the potential of deepening ties in trade and investment, counterterrorism, and people-to-people relations. 

press release by the Italian government said that the pair spoke of the importance of stability in the Indo-Pacific and the “repercussions” of the Ukraine war, particularly on food and energy availability. 

France

In their first in-person meeting since the G7 summit in June and building on the progress made during their meeting in May, French President Emmanuel Macron and Modi discussed ties in sectors such as defence, civil, nuclear, trade, and investment, along with global and regional issues of mutual interest. They both underscored the need to expand ties in “new areas of economic engagements.”

Germany

Marking their third meeting this year, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz and Modi celebrated how bilateral relations have entered a new phase due to initiatives such as the Partnership on Green and Sustainable Development, which the two sides have said will expand “bilateral, triangular and multilateral cooperation and link it with the strong commitment of both sides on the implementation of the Paris Agreement and SDGs.” 

In addition, they agreed to expand ties in defence and security, migration and mobility, and infrastructure, along with strengthening their collaboration in multilateral forums like G20 and United Nations.