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India’s Modi invited to meet with Trump next week — White House official

India’s Modi invited to meet with Trump next week — White House official
US President Donald Trump and India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi talk as they arrive for a joint news conference after bilateral talks at Hyderabad House in New Delhi, India, on February 25, 2020. (REUTERS/File)
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Updated 04 February 2025

India’s Modi invited to meet with Trump next week — White House official

India’s Modi invited to meet with Trump next week — White House official
  • Invitation reportedly came hours after a US military plane departed to return deported migrants to India
  • New Delhi keen to avoid tariffs that Trump has threatened in the past, citing India’s high tariffs on US goods

WASHINGTON: US President Donald Trump has invited Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi to visit the White House next week, a White House official said, hours after a US military plane departed to return deported migrants to the country.

Trump spoke with Modi on Jan. 27, when he discussed immigration and stressed the importance of India buying more American-made security equipment and fair bilateral trading ties.

India, a strategic partner of the United States in its efforts to counter China, is keen to enhance trade relations with the US and make it easier for its citizens to get skilled worker visas.

It is also keen to avoid tariffs that Trump has threatened in the past, citing India’s high tariffs on US products.

The United States is India’s largest trading partner and two-way trade between the two countries surpassed $118 billion in 2023/24, with India posting a trade surplus of $32 billion. 


Argentine ex-president Kirchner goes on trial in new corruption case

Updated 6 sec ago

Argentine ex-president Kirchner goes on trial in new corruption case

Argentine ex-president Kirchner goes on trial in new corruption case
BUENOS AIRES: Argentine ex-president Cristina Kirchner, who is serving a six-year fraud sentence under house arrest, goes on trial Thursday in a separate case for allegedly taking millions of dollars in bribes.
The center-left Kirchner, a dominant and polarizing figure in Argentine politics for over two decades, served two terms from 2007-2015.
Her latest trial comes as her ailing Peronist movement — named after iconic post-war leader Juan Peron — reels from its stinging defeat at the hands of right-wing President Javier Milei’s party in last month’s midterm elections.
Milei has hailed the result as a vindication of his radical free-market agenda, which the Peronists, champions of state intervention in the economy, vehemently oppose.
The so-called “notebooks” scandal revolves around records kept by a government chauffeur of cash bribes he claims to have delivered from businessmen to government officials between 2003-2015.
Kirchner, 72, was first lady from 2003-2007, when her late husband Nestor Kirchner was president.
She succeeded him after his term ended and then later served as vice president to Alberto Fernandez from 2019 until 2023, when Milei took office.
Kirchner is accused of leading a criminal enterprise that took bribes from businesspeople in return for the awarding of state contracts.
Eighty-seven people are accused in the case, including a former minister and several junior ministers.
Kirchner, who was placed under house arrest with an electronic ankle monitor in June after being convicted of “fraudulent administration” as president, maintains she is the victim of a politically-inspired judicial hounding.
It was not clear whether she will appear at the trial by video-conference from her home in Buenos Aires.
She faces between six and 10 years in prison if convicted at the end of what is expected to be a lengthy trial.
Her lawyers have cast doubt on the credibility of the entries in the chauffeur’s notebooks, saying they were changed over 1,500 times.