Indian fashion visit us and meet Trump next week
BBC News, Delhi
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi will visit President Donald Trump now next week, he says in the White House.
Other reports say fashion will attend the evening the US president was on a two -day trip. Official work visits have yet to be announced.
The fashion will be among the first foreign leaders to meet Trump at the White House during their second term. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is currently in Washington, and Japanese Prime Minister Shiger Ishiba was supposed to be this week.
Modi and Trump shared warm relations during the first term of the US president. Last week detained A “productive” phone call and discussed illegal immigration, security and trade connections, said the White House.
Analysts say it will be interesting to see if Bonhomie between the two will help overcome concerns about trade and immigration.
Trump called a “big leader” last year, but also accused India of collecting excessive tariffs.
Confirmation of a visit to the Indian leader Washington followed shortly after the USA A military flight deports about 100 Indian nationals landed in the Punjab state.
It is said that everyone on board or illegally entered the US or overrated their visas.
During last week’s call, Trump said he was sure that India would “do the right thing” when it comes to illegal immigration.
Massively the deportation of unfathomable foreign nationals made key policy. Earlier, Bloomberg reported that 18,000 unfathomable Indian migrants who had lived illegally in the United States have been identified so far, but the real number is likely to be higher.
According to the Pew Research Center, there were about 725,000 unfathomable Indian immigrants in the US last year.
India has so far avoided the threat of tariffs to the United States.
In the past, Trump called India the “tariff king” and the “great abuser” of trade connections and threatened with reciprocal measures if Delhi did not reduce the US import tax.
The recent budget in India recorded duties of declining a number of goods, including top motorcycles like the iconic Harley Davidson.
The Indian Minister of Finance told the local media that it was a sign that the country was not “King of Tariff”.
Last week, the Indian Ministry of Foreign Affairs announced that two countries work to further deepen their bilateral relations.
Foreign Minister of Foreign Affairs with Jaishankar represented India on Trump’s inaugural ceremony and conducted talks with his American colleague Marc Rubio while in Washington.
In November, after Trump’s election victory, Jaishankar said the country was not nervous about working with the US president.