The visit to Indonesia will see a focus on reviewing
the bilateral partnership, while in Australia, PM Modi will participate in the
third India-Australia Annual Summit process. Covering New Zealand in the
last leg of his visit, PM Modi would become the first Indian Prime Minister to
visit the country in forty years.
Addressing a special press briefing ahead of the Prime
Minister’s visit to three countries, Ministry of External Affairs Secretary
(East) Rudrendra Tandon said, “The Prime Minister will be visiting
Indonesia on 8th and 9th July. After that, he’ll be in Melbourne, Australia for
10th July and then New Zealand on 11th July.”
Sharing inputs on the
itinerary of the Prime Minister, Tandon said that in Indonesia, the main place
of engagement is the capital, Jakarta, but the Prime Minister will also be
visiting the cultural centre Jag Jakarta, where he will go to the Prabanan
temple complex, where India is planning to collaborate with Indonesia on the
conservation work there. He underlined how the last two weeks saw a focus on
the Western Indian Ocean, with
PM Modi’s visits to Mauritius and Seychelles. The recent visit of Japanese PM Sanae Takaichi to New
Delhi and the forthcoming visits of PM Modi to Indonesia, Australia and New
Zealand, he said shifts the focus on the eastern maritime zones of the Indian Ocean and the Act East engagement. Reflecting on the importance of Indonesia
and the critical role it plays in the security and stability of the Malacca Straits, the MEA Secretary
highlighted its importance for India and recalled the elevation of ties of
Comprehensive Strategic Partnership, which took place during the visit of Prime
Minister Modi to Indonesia in 2018.
“The Comprehensive Strategic Partnership that was
first put in place when Prime Minister Modi visited Indonesia in 2018 has
become a major building block of India’s Act East policy and the MAHASAGAR vision
over these last few years. Indonesia is also a key country within the ASEAN
grouping that has been playing collectively a very important role in
strengthening the rule-based order in this zone,” Tandon said.
The MEA Secretary said that the leaders will review
the relationship and try to move it forward in all aspects, especially maritime
cooperation, defence, enhancing trade and economic relationship and deepening
the people-to-people ties. “The visit to Indonesia will be very much a
continuation of the conversation on various bilateral tracks of cooperation
that began when President Prabowo visited India as the guest of honour in 2025
for the 75th Republic Day celebrations,” he said. Tandon informed that in Melbourne, Prime
Minister Modi will participate in the third India-Australia Annual Summit
process. The apex level institutional mechanism was put in place under the
Comprehensive Strategic Partnership Agreement 2020. Tandon underlined, “The conversations
will cover emerging areas of bilateral relations, in particular the critical
cybersecurity domain, supply chain resilience, and emerging technologies. After
Australia, the Prime Minister will be in New Zealand, where he will hold
discussions with Prime Minister Luxon.”
The MEA Secretary (East) further noted the positive fulcrum in ties
since the visit of President Christopher Luxon to India in 2025 and informed, “The
visit to New Zealand is historic because it will be the first visit by the
Indian Prime Minister in 40 years.” Luxon was the guest of honour and
keynote speaker at the Raisina Dialogue 2025.