DH Latest NewsDH NEWSLatest NewsIndiaNEWSGulf

PM Modi’s UAE visit postponed amid surge in Omicron cases

 

New Delhi: The visit of Prime Minister Narendra Modi to UAE, which was expected to take place in the first week of January, has been postponed, amid a spike in Omicron cases. PM Modi was scheduled to visit UAE from January 6 on his first foreign visit in the new year.

 

India and UAE are holding talks for Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement (CEPA) and there were reports that the agreement could be announced during the Prime Minister’s visit. It would be India’s first CEPA in the gulf region. The foreign ministers of India, Israel, the United States and UAE, a new quad bloc focused on economic and infrastructure issues, are expected to hold a meeting on the margins of Expo 2020 in Dubai. Dubai Expo is slated to continue till March next year.

 

Earlier in August 2015, PM Modi’s visit to UAE marked the beginning of a new Comprehensive and Strategic Partnership between the two countries. Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan, Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi and Deputy Supreme Commander of UAE Armed Forces, visited India in February 2016. He visited India for the second time in January 2017 as the chief guest at the Republic Day celebrations. It was during this visit that the bilateral relations were upgraded to ‘Comprehensive Strategic Partnership’.

 

PM Modi visited UAE in February 2018 and delivered the keynote address at the sixth World Government Summit in Dubai, where India was invited as the guest of honour. He paid his third and the most recent visit to UAE in August 2019 and was conferred with the UAE’s highest award, the ‘Order of Zayed’ during the visit.

Also read: Congress nurture and inspire terrorists; file false cases against Hindu leaders: Yogi Adityanath

 

India and UAE are also striving to further strengthen their trade ties. India was UAE’s third-largest trading partner in 2019-20 after China and US. For UAE, India was the second-largest trading partner in 2019 with an amount of around US$ 41.43 billion (non-oil trade).

shortlink

Post Your Comments


Back to top button