Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu will be on a four-day visit to India starting 14 January, a little more than six months after his Indian counterpart Narendra Modi visited the Jewish state, informed sources said.
His visit next year comes almost 15 years after the first visit by Prime Minister Ariel Sharon to New Delhi in 2003.
The Israeli Prime Minister would be received by Modi in Ahmedabad on his arrival on 14 January. Modi has in the past welcomed Chinese President Xi Jinping and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe in his home state.
Netanyahu is expected to hold most of his official meetings in New Delhi on 15 and 16 January.
The Israeli leader would also be going to Mumbai on 17 January where he would be visiting the Jewish Chabad House, a site of 2008 terrorist attack in Mumbai.
He would head back to Israel on 18 January. There could also be a possible stopover in Agra during the visit.
PM Modi's standalone visit to Israel in July this year celebrated 25 years of establishment of diplomatic relations between the two countries. The Indian prime minister skipped Palestine during his trip leading many analysts to say that New Delhi was changing its rules of engagement in the region.
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas was invited to New Delhi a few weeks before Modi's visit to Israel, in what was his fifth visit to India in 12 years and the third state visit.
Netanyahu had called PM Modi's "historic visit" a "very significant step" in strengthening bilateral relations that are on a "constant upswing".
The Israeli leader has also grabbed every opportunity to emphasise on his "personal chemistry" with his Indian counterpart, including at the United Nations General Assembly in September where he shared the memories of Modi's three-day visit to Israel from 4-6 July.
"...We imagined the endless possibilities for Israel, India, for all humanity," he had said during his UNGA address. Modi extended an invitation to Netanyahu to visit India "at a mutually convenient time" during a 5 July press conference in Jerusalem.
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Netanyahu had described the invitation as "a deeply moving moment for me, both in personal, but also in national and international terms".
Both the governments have taken several measures since Modi's Israel trip to strengthen bilateral ties.
Some of them include establishment of a USD 40 million joint fund to encourage Israeli and Indian business cooperation, agreements permitting and extending incentives to Bollywood filmmakers looking to shoot in Israel, efforts to promote growth in tourism, and a joint government project in the fields of water and agriculture.
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