PM Modi holds bilateral meetings with counterparts from Australia, Vietnam

The meetings took place on the sidelines of the ASEAN summit in the Philippines.

Press Trust of India  |  Manila 

Narendra Modi
(Photo: @MEAIndia)

Prime Minister Modi today held separate bilateral talks with his Australian counterpart Malcolm Turnbull and Vietnamese premier Nguyen Xuan Phuc and discussed various issues of strategic interest, including evolving security scenario in the Indo-Pacific region.

The meetings took place on the sidelines of the summit in the


In the meeting with Turnbull, Modi is also understood to have discussed convergence of strategic interest of both the countries in the Indo-Pacific in the backdrop of China's aggressive military posturing in the region.

Officials of India, Australia, the US and had met on Sunday here to give shape to the proposed quadrilateral to pursue their common security interest in the region.

The issue also figured during talks between Modi and US President Donald Trump here yesterday.

"A strategic partnership defined by close co-operation and multifaceted interaction. Prime Minister @narendramodi and Prime Minister @TurnbullMalcolm meet in Manila, discuss close cooperation to optimise significant potential for further cooperation across a broad range of areas," external affairs ministry spokesperson Raveesh Kumar tweeted.

A number of issues including bilateral cooperation in defence and security sphere were discussed in Modis meeting with his Vietnamese counterpart.

"Strengthening comprehensive strategic partnership. Prime Minister @narendramodi and Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc of Vietnam shared common goal to deepen bilateral relations between the two countries," Kumar said in another tweet.

The Modi-Phuc meeting came days after Trump's visit to Vietnam where he offered to mediate in the South Sea dispute between several member countries including Vietnam and

claims sovereignty over all of the South Sea, a huge source of hydrocarbons. However, several member countries including Vietnam, the and Brunei have counter claims.

has been supporting freedom of navigation and access to resources in the South Sea in accordance with principles of international law, including the 1982 UN Convention on the Law of the Sea.

First Published: Tue, November 14 2017. 12:46 IST