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6 Days, 4 Countries, 3 Summits: PM Modi’s May Calendar is Booked For Foreign Tour | Details Here


Last Updated: May 18, 2023, 21:26 IST

Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, U.S. President Joe Biden, Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi attend the Japan-U.S.-Australia-India Fellowship Founding Celebration event, in Tokyo, Japan, May 24, 2022. (Image: Reuters)

The prime minister is set to undertake a six-day visit in which he will travel to Japan, then Papua New Guinea, and finally to Australia this month.

With a tour of three countries, over forty engagements and 3 multilateral summits, Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s calendar for the month of May is booked with back-to-back foreign commitments.

The prime minister is set to undertake a six-day visit in which he will travel to Japan, then Papua New Guinea, and finally to Australia this month.

In this foreign tour, he is set to attend three multilateral summits including Group of Seven (G7), Forum for India-Pacific Islands Cooperation (FIPIC) and  Quad.

PM Modi will be working around the clock and will interact with over two dozen world leaders in the summits, as well as through one-on-one bilateral meetings with nations.

He is also scheduled to meet business leaders, important personalities, scholars, and members of Indian diaspora on his trip.

First destination: Japan

The trip’s first destination will be the G7 summit in Japan’s Hiroshima, and the prime minister will be there from May 19 to 21.

He will likely voice his opinions on global challenges including food, fertiliser and energy security.

G7: Japan will be hosting the G7 summit in its capacity as the current chair and PM Modi has been invited for it by Japanese Prime Minister Kishida Fumio.

The broad agenda of the G7 summit will focus on nuclear disarmament, economic resilience, economic security, regional issues, climate change, energy security, food and health, news agency PTI said.

Modi will also inaugurate a bust of Mahatma Gandhi in Hiroshima, Foreign Secretary Vinay Kwatra said at a media briefing.

Kwatra added that India’s regular participation at the G7 summits points to increasing recognition that it should be a part of any serious effort to resolve global challenges including those of peace, security and development.

QUAD: The Quad summit, which was originally scheduled to be held in Sydney,  will now take place in Hiroshima. This is as US President Joe Biden postponed his visit to Australia to focus on crucial debt-ceiling talks in Washington.

Second leg: Papua New Guinea

From Hiroshima, the prime minister will travel to Port Moresby in Papua New Guinea where he will host the third summit of FIPIC on May 22, jointly with Prime Minister James Marape.

Final leg: Australia 

In the third and final leg of the trip, PM Modi will visit Australia. Here, he is set to hold talks with his counterpart Anthony Albanese and also schedule to address members of the Indian community at an event on May 23.

With agency inputs



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