Narendra Modi's trip to Japan in 2016 - which came immediately demonetisation - led to accusations by Opposition that he was travelling the world while ordinary Indians were struggling.
Prime
Minister Narendra
Modi’s hectic travel schedule over the past four-and-a-half
years cost Indian taxpayers about $280 million (Rs 20.09 billion
taking the value of rupee as 71.76 per dollar) as he made 84 trips
around the world, according to India’s foreign ministry.
The
money spent on each trip, combined with the cost of maintenance on
Air India One and setting up a secure hotline, was provided in a
response to a lawmaker’s question in parliament by V K Singh, the
country’s junior foreign minister.
Since
taking office, Modi has maintained a punishing pace of world
travel, meeting some global leaders such as US President Donald
Trump and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe multiple times in a bid
to boost India’s influence in global affairs and secure its
strategic interests.
Some
of his trips, including an informal summit with Xi Jinping in the
Chinese city of Wuhan, are credited as diplomatic successes. His
meeting with China’s leader after a tense stand-off in the
Himalayas was seen as ushering in a detente between the world’s two
most-populous countries.
Others
generated some controversy.
His
trip to Japan in 2016 -- which came immediately after Modi eliminated
86 per cent of India’s currency, sending millions into bank queues
to exchange worthless cash -- led to accusations by the opposition
that he was travelling the world while ordinary Indians were
struggling.
Some
were also a bit odd. While on a trip to Africa, Modi -- a vegetarian
and devout Hindu nationalist who reveres and worships bovines -- gave
Rwandan villagers 200 dairy cows on a beef-eating continent where
there is a possibility of them getting slaughtered.
He also signed a
memorandum of understanding to open a yoga college in China’s
Yunnan province, and pledged to cooperate with Turkmenistan on both
yoga and traditional Indian medicine, according to the statement.
These
sorts of agreements -- aspirational, though sometimes vaguely-worded
-- were signed with countries as varied as China and Palestine. In
Oman, a memorandum of understanding was signed pledging "cooperation
in the field of health." In Portugal, Modi’s diplomats pledged
to cooperate "in the exploration and uses of outer space for
peaceful purposes," an agreement India also struck with Vietnam
and Oman.
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