NEW DELHI :
RUSSIAN President Vladmir
Putin on Thursday proposed
a bilateral meeting with Prime
Minister Narendra Modi on
the sidelines of the BRICS
summit in Kazan next month
when NSA Ajit Doval called
on him in St Petersburg.
The Putin-Doval meeting
came nearly three weeks after
Modi travelled to Ukranian
capital Kyiv and held talks
with President Volodymyr
Zelenskyy.
Doval is in St Petersburg to
attend a conclave of national security advisors of the
BRICS (Brazil-Russia-IndiaChina-South Africa) nations.
The summit of the grouping will be held in the Russian
city of Kazan from October
22-24. Modi is set to attend
the summit.
“Vladimir Putin noted thesuccessful development of
the Special and PrivilegedStrategic Partnershipbetween India and Russia andstressed the importance of
security issues in bilateral
relations, thanking the Indianside for maintaining dialoguein this area,” a Russian readout said.
It said the RussianPresident proposed to hold abilateral meeting with Modi
on October 22 on the sidelines of the BRICS summit to“summarise the outcomes of
joint work” on the implementation of the agreementsreached during the Indianleader’s visit to Moscow andto outline prospects for thenear future. Modi visited Russia in July.
“We are waiting for our good friend Modi
and best regards to him,” the Russian media
quoted Putin as saying in the meeting with
Doval.
On Wednesday, the NSA held wide-ranging talks with his Russian counterpart Sergei
Shoigufocusingonimportantissuesof“mutual interests”.
“Both sides reviewed progress in bilateral
cooperation and discussed important issues
of mutual interest,” the Indian embassy in
Russia said on the talks between Doval and
Shoigu.
It is understood that Modi’s talks with
Zelenskyy in Kyiv on August 23 figured in the
talks between the two NSAs.
In his talks with Zelenskyy, Modi said both
Ukraine and Russia should sit together without wasting time to end the ongoing war and
that India was ready to play an “active role”
to restore peace in the region.
The Prime Minister said India was on the
side of peace since the beginning of the conflictandhewouldevenliketocontributepersonally for a peacefulresolution of the crisis.
Modi’s nearly nine-hour visit to Ukraine,
the first by an Indian Prime Minister since its
independence in 1991, came six weeks after
he held summit talks with Putin in Moscow.
In the last few days, there have been calls
forIndia’spotentialroleinpushingpeacetalks
between Russia and Ukraine as New Delhi
has good relations with both the nations.