India-Jamaica Ties Strengthened: Jaishankar Highlights Development Partnership

External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar has emphasized that development cooperation remains central to India-Jamaica relations. After meeting with Jamaican counterpart Kamina J. Smith, both sides identified new avenues for partnership, including digital transformation and sports. India has completed a $1 million rural livelihoods project in Kingston and is supplying health equipment like dialysis units. Jaishankar also discussed regional issues with Jamaican Prime Minister Andrew Holness, reaffirming cooperation on multilateral reforms.

Key Points: India-Jamaica Ties: Jaishankar Highlights Development

  • India and Jamaica sign new agreements in digital, cultural, and sports sectors
  • India completes $1M rural livelihoods project benefiting 200+ individuals
  • India supplies 30 dialysis units and 10 BHISHM Cubes to Jamaica
  • Both nations discuss defense, security, and global South priorities
3 min read

Development cooperation important pillar of India-Jamaica ties: EAM Jaishankar

EAM Jaishankar emphasizes development cooperation as key in India-Jamaica ties, covering new agreements in digital, health, and disaster relief.

"Development cooperation remains a very important pillar of our co-partnership - S. Jaishankar"

Kingston, May 5

External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar has emphasised that development cooperation remains central to the India-Jamaica relationship, with both sides exploring new avenues to deepen bilateral engagement.

Addressing a press conference following his meeting with Jamaican counterpart Kamina J. Smith on Monday (local time), EAM Jaishankar said, "Our talks today were comprehensive and very substantive, and we reviewed the entire gamut of India-Jamaica relations. We identified new avenues for further strengthening our partnership."

He said that both the nations have signed several agreements and discussed "effective implementations" of MOUs, which were recently concluded across the fields of digital transformation, cultural exchange, sports, and digital payments, "to ensure tangible outcomes on the ground".

Stressing that "development cooperation remains a very important pillar of our co-partnership", the EAM welcomed the successful completion and handover of the Improving Rural Livelihoods project in Kingston Town in March. The project was supported by India with US$1 million under the India-UN Development Partnership Fund through the United Nations Office for South-South Cooperation (UNOSSC).

"The project has directly benefited over 200 individuals and has a wider positive impact on thousands in the Kingston Town community," he noted.

EAM Jaishankar stressed that both sides explored the feasibility of the establishment of an artisan empowerment hub for Jamaica as part of New Delhi's commitment under the India-CARICOM Development Partnership.

He also expressed satisfaction with India's role in supporting Jamaica's recovery and reconstruction efforts following Hurricane Melissa last year.

Highlighting health initiatives by India, the EAM said, "There was a symbolic handing over of what was one of the consignments of 10 BHISHM Cubes. We are also in the process of supplying 30 dialysis units to strengthen the health infrastructure in Jamaica. This is in continuation of the earlier humanitarian assistance provided in the aftermath of the hurricane, where over twenty tonnes of relief material were delivered through an Indian Air Force plane."

"We deployed a medical team to build local capacities. And these efforts reflect our commitment as a reliable development partner for disaster response. We have been discussing expanding our cooperation in several areas of mutual interest, particularly defence and security, healthcare, digitisation, agriculture, education, and infrastructure," he added.

EAM Jaishankar stated that his discussions with Jamaican Prime Minister Andrew Holness covered key regional and global developments, with both sides reaffirming close cooperation in multilateral fora, particularly on reformed multilateralism and priorities of the Global South.

While concluding, he expressed confidence that the outcome of the discussions would contribute to a stronger, more dynamic, beneficial, and trust-based partnership.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
The emphasis on digital transformation and sports exchange is promising. India's UPI system could be a great fit for Jamaica's financial inclusion goals. I hope the MoUs lead to real outcomes, not just paperwork.
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Michael C
As someone who's visited Jamaica, I can say this partnership makes perfect sense. Both countries have similar values and development challenges. The US$1 million rural livelihoods project is small but targeted—that's how real impact begins.
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Rohit P
I appreciate India's consistent focus on South-South cooperation. From hurricane relief to dialysis units, we're showing how emerging economies can support each other without the baggage of old colonial powers. The artisan empowerment hub idea is particularly thoughtful. 👌
K
Kavya N
One concern: are we spreading our diplomatic resources too thin? We have so many bilateral ties to manage. But if this helps India gain a stronger voice in UN reforms and Caribbean support on issues like terrorism, it's worth it.
J
James A
India's soft power is growing impressively. Cricket, yoga, digital tech—these are the bridges that build lasting relationships. Jaishankar's diplomatic energy is remarkable.
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Aman W
The focus on agriculture and education is spot on.

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