New Zealand, India upgrade ties as PM Modi visits Auckland


FILE PHOTO: Prime Minister of New Zealand Christopher Luxon shakes hands with his Indian counterpart Narendra Modi before their meeting at Hyderabad House in New Delhi, India, March 17, 2025. REUTERS/Adnan Abidi/File Photo

WELLINGTON, July 11 (Reuters) - Indian ⁠Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his New Zealand ⁠counterpart Christopher Luxon upgraded their nations' diplomatic ties on ‌Saturday, as Modi seeks to bolster New Delhi's ties in the Asia-Pacific region.

The leaders elevated bilateral relations to a "strategic partnership" during talks in ​Auckland, reflecting their nations' "shared democratic values, ⁠deep people-to-people links, and shared ⁠interests in the Indo-Pacific", they said in a statement.

Modi, who ⁠arrived ‌on Friday night after signing deals with Indonesia and Australia, is to address an Indian diaspora ⁠event at an Auckland arena later on Saturday, ​public broadcaster ‌Radio New Zealand reported.

The first visit by an Indian ⁠prime minister ​to New Zealand in 40 years comes amid rising anti-Indian sentiment in New Zealand and tensions in its ruling coalition caused ⁠by a free-trade agreement between the ​two nations.

The two countries have also moved closer on security, signing a defence cooperation arrangement and pledging greater collaboration on ⁠maritime safety, reflecting shared concerns about stability in the Indo-Pacific.

However, rising Indian migration has made the community a flashpoint in New Zealand's immigration debate, with Indian New Zealanders reporting ​more racial abuse while politicians including Winston ⁠Peters' New Zealand First party push for tighter migrant controls. ​About 292,000 of New Zealand's 5.3 ‌million people identified as Indianin ​a 2023 census.

(Reporting by Sam McKeith in Sydney and Lucy Craymer in Wellington; Editing by William Mallard)

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