Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney arrived in Mumbai to begin his first official visit to India. The trip aims to reset ties and expand cooperation in trade, energy, and AI. PM Modi previously set a 50 billion USD bilateral trade target for 2030.
The cornerstone of the stay will be delegation-level talks at Hyderabad House, acting as a formal follow-up to previous dialogues held in Kananaskis and Johannesburg in 2025. Delegation-level talks with Prime Minister Narendra Modi is scheduled for March 2 at Hyderabad House.
Earlier on Wednesday, Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney departed for India, marking the commencement of a high-profile state visit aimed at strengthening bilateral relations and advancing strategic cooperation.
According to the Ministry of External Affairs (MEA), visiting from February 27 to March 2 at the invitation of Prime Minister Narendra Modi, it is Carney's first official visit to India after assuming office. The visit is aimed at strengthening bilateral relations and exploring new areas
As per the MEA release, Carney will arrive in Mumbai on February 27. Over the next two days, he will participate in separate business engagements, interact with Indian and Canadian CEOs, industry and financial experts, innovators, educators, and Canadian Pension Funds based in India.
Dinesh Patnaik, the Indian High Commissioner to Canada said that the current status of the ties between New Delhi and Ottawa is doing extremely well despite the blip in the last two years. He expressed confidence ahead of the visit of Canadian PM Mark Carney to India and said that the two
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney expressed deep sorrow after a mass shooting in Tumbler Ridge, British Columbia, left 10 people dead, including the suspect, and injured at least 25. Police said there is no ongoing threat, and authorities continue investigating the incident.
Rajan Sawhney, Minister of Indigenous Relations Government of Alberta, Canada hailed the strong bilateral ties between India and Canada and spoke about the upcoming visit of Canadian PM Mark Carney to India, expressing optimism that it will be beneficial and productive for both countries. Sh
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney rejected claims he softened his Davos remarks after speaking with US President Donald Trump, reaffirming his stance on global trade and middle-power cooperation while addressing tariff tensions, China trade, and upcoming talks with India.
The comment came after NATO Spokesperson Allison Hart said that NATO secretary General Mark Rutte had held productive talks on Arctic security with US President Donald Trump.
Ahead of Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney's official visit to China, several leading human rights organisations and civil society groups in Canada have urged Ottawa to place human rights on par with trade and diplomatic engagement during talks with Beijing.