Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Brazilian Prez may be chief guest on R-day

- HT Correspond­ent

NEW DELHI: The government is likely to invite Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro as the chief guest at next year’s Republic Day celebratio­ns as part of New Delhi’s outreach to South America, people familiar with developmen­ts said.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi will be in Brasilia on November 13-14 to attend the Brics (Brazil-russia-india-china-south Africa) Summit. A formal invitation is expected to be extended when the Indian premier holds a bilateral meeting with Bolsonaro during the visit, the people cited above said on condition of anonymity.

Modi and Bolsonaro attended the Future Investment Initiative business forum in Saudi Arabia last month and were together at a dinner hosted by the Saudi King for heads of state and government at the meeting. They were also the two heads of government who addressed the forum in Riyadh.

The people said an invitation to Bolsonaro will dovetail with the Indian government’s outreach to

Latin and South America.

The choice of the chief guest at the Republic Day celebratio­ns is influenced by several factors, includinge­conomicint­erestsand strategic and diplomatic relations. President Cyril Ramaphosa of South Africa, another key member of the Brics grouping, was invited as the chief guest after US President Donald Trump declined to attend.

If Bolsonaro accepts the invitation, it will set up his first visit to India since he assumed the office in January. He will also become the third Brazilian president to be chief guest at the event after Fernando Cardoso in 1996 and Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva in 2004.

Though bilateral trade with Brazil was worth only $7.6 billion in 2017, it has grown the fastest among Brazil’s top 10 trade partners. A large Indian business delegation is expected to be present during Modi’s visit to attend the Brics Business Forum.

Brazil has also backed India’s efforts to strengthen counter-terrorism cooperatio­n under the Brics framework. The two countries have worked closely within Brics for focused consultati­ons on terrorism, and the Brics joint working group on counter-terrorism to constitute five working sub-groups on terror financing, use of internet for terrorism, countering radicalisa­tion, the issue of foreign terrorist fighters and capacity-building. India is expected to chair the sub-group on use of the internet for terror.

SRINAGAR: Railways authoritie­s on Monday conducted a trial run in Jammu and Kashmir, a day before rail services were scheduled to resume in parts of the Valley after three months, officials familiar with the matter said.

Train services in Kashmir were suspended as part of the security restrictio­ns clamped down in the region after the government nullified Article 370 of the Constituti­on that gave a special status to Kashmir and bifurcated J&K into two Union Territorie­s on August 5.

“We held a trial run today [Monday]. In total, four trips were made between Srinagar and Baramulla,” said a railways official on condition of anonymity.

The official said they will first resume train services between central and north Kashmir. “In the first phase, we will be running two trains between Srinagar and Baramulla that will make four trips in total,” the official said.

Union railways minister Piyush Goyal said the resumption of train services will speed up developmen­t in the region.

“Rail traffic is being resumed from tomorrow [Tuesday] as the situation in Kashmir Valley is normal… With the commenceme­nt of trains operations, the developmen­t of tourism and industries in Kashmir will increase at a more rapid pace,” he tweeted in Hindi.

The official quoted earlier in the story added that at present, there weren’t any plans to restart train services to south Kashmir, a militancy hotbed. “We will resume train services in south Kashmir when we will get a security clearance,” he said.

THE TRAIN SERVICES WERE SUSPENDED AS PART OF THE SECURITY RESTRICTIO­NS CLAMPED DOWN IN THE REGION AFTER THE CENTRE NULLIFIED ARTICLE 370

 ??  ?? Jair Bolsonaro
Jair Bolsonaro

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