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Modi’s Russia visit a sign of India’s unresolved tensions with China, analysts say

  • Modi’s visit underscores importance of Russia ties and reluctance to engage China with border issues still outstanding, observers note

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Russian President Vladimir Putin (left) and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi greet each other before their meeting in New Delhi in 2021. Photo: AP

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi has confirmed a two-day visit to Russia, following his decision to skip a regional summit where Chinese President Xi Jinping is in attendance.

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Analysts suggest the two moves are a sign of New Delhi’s unresolved tensions with Beijing over their border issues, its desire to maintain strong ties with Moscow and its strategic efforts at balancing relations between the two.

Modi was absent from a meeting of the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) – a grouping initially established by China, Russia and the ex-Soviet Central Asian states of Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan – which convened this week in Kazakhstan’s capital of Astana.

Instead, Foreign Minister S Jaishankar was tasked to attend the meeting, with Delhi claiming the dates clashed with India’s first session of parliament under Modi’s third-term government.

Armoured vehicles of the Indian army at a military camp in eastern Ladakh in India in May. Photo: AFP
Armoured vehicles of the Indian army at a military camp in eastern Ladakh in India in May. Photo: AFP

Analysts are divided on whether Modi’s decision signals his unwillingness to engage directly with Xi at the regional meeting due to the outstanding border issues that have remained a source of tension since their troops clashed in 2020.

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