Historic First: President Murmu's Botswana Visit Amid Cheetah Translocation Talks

President Droupadi Murmu has begun her historic first state visit to Botswana with a ceremonial welcome in Gaborone. This marks the first time an Indian head of state has visited Botswana, highlighting the growing importance of India-Africa relations. The visit follows her successful engagements in Angola where significant defence cooperation agreements were discussed. Botswana has shown interest in collaborating on Project Cheetah, potentially translocating cheetahs to India as part of conservation efforts.

Key Points: President Murmu Begins First Indian State Visit to Botswana

  • First-ever state visit by Indian head of state to Botswana marks diplomatic milestone
  • Botswana expresses readiness for cheetah translocation under Project Cheetah
  • Visit follows Angola leg where $200 million defence credit was approved
  • Focus on expanding cooperation in trade, technology, defence and health sectors
  • Part of India's broader strategy to strengthen ties with African nations
  • Includes discussions on space technology and digital public infrastructure partnerships
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President Droupadi Murmu begins historic first-ever state visit to Botswana with ceremonial welcome

President Droupadi Murmu begins historic first state visit to Botswana, strengthening bilateral ties and discussing cheetah translocation as part of Project Cheetah initiative.

"The visit reflected India's growing focus on deepening partnerships across political, economic, developmental, and cultural dimensions. - MEA Secretary Sudhakar Dalela"

Gaborone, November 12

President Droupadi Murmu received a ceremonial welcome in Gaborone, Botswana, on Tuesday, marking the beginning of her state visit to the country. President of Botswana, Advocate Duma Gideon Boko, was also present on the occasion.

President Murmu's arrival in Botswana marks the first-ever state visit by an Indian head of state to the country. The visit is part of her two-nation tour to Africa, which began in Angola, reflecting India's deepening engagement with the continent.

Earlier, President Murmu departed from Luanda for her visit to Botswana after concluding her engagements in Angola, the first leg of her tour from November 8 to 11, undertaken at the invitation of her Angolan counterpart, João Lourenco.

The visit to Angola underscored India's commitment to strengthening ties with Africa and the Global South. The historic trip built upon recent high-level exchanges, including Angolan President Lourenco's visit to New Delhi in May.

Discussions during the visit advanced the agenda set earlier this year, which saw India approve a USD 200 million line of credit to help Angola modernise its defence forces. Both sides also held talks to finalise this agreement, aimed at facilitating Angola in sourcing defence equipment from India.

According to MEA Secretary of Economic Relations Sudhakar Dalela, President Murmu's tour reflected India's growing focus on deepening partnerships across political, economic, developmental, and cultural dimensions.

He further noted that the visit also included discussions on translocating cheetahs from Botswana as part of Project Cheetah in India.

During her stay in Angola, President Murmu held comprehensive bilateral talks with President Lourenco at the Presidential Palace in Luanda, attended the 50th anniversary celebrations of Angola's independence, addressed the Angolan Parliament, and interacted with members of the Indian community.

The two sides also discussed co-operation in healthcare, space technology, and digital public infrastructure. In addition, they explored ways to strengthen partnerships under global initiatives such as the International Solar Alliance, the Coalition for Disaster Resilient Infrastructure, the Global Biofuel Alliance, and the International Big Cat Alliance.

Following the completion of her engagements in Angola, President Murmu arrived in Botswana for the second leg of her Africa tour, scheduled from November 11 to 13, at the invitation of President Duma Gideon Boko.

This visit marks a milestone in India-Botswana relations, as it is the first-ever state visit by an Indian head of state to Botswana.

The Botswana leg will focus on expanding co-operation in trade, investment, technology, energy, agriculture, health, pharmaceuticals, defence, and people-to-people exchanges.

During her visit, President Murmu will hold bilateral discussions, address the National Assembly of Botswana, and visit cultural and historical sites.

Botswana has also expressed its readiness to collaborate with India on Project Cheetah and the possible translocation of cheetahs from Botswana to India.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Excellent diplomatic move! Africa is the future and India needs to strengthen ties there. The $200 million defence line of credit to Angola shows we're serious about building meaningful partnerships, not just symbolic visits.
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Sarah B
While I appreciate the diplomatic efforts, I hope these visits translate into tangible benefits for ordinary Indians. Sometimes these high-profile tours feel more like photo opportunities than substantive engagements that help our economy.
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Arjun K
The focus on healthcare, space technology, and digital infrastructure cooperation is brilliant! This is exactly how India should leverage its strengths to build lasting partnerships. Jai Hind! 🙏
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Kavya N
Wonderful to see our President representing India with such grace and dignity. The cheetah project collaboration with Botswana is a beautiful example of environmental cooperation between nations. More such initiatives please!
M
Michael C
Impressive to see India's strategic outreach to Africa. The combination of defence cooperation, technology transfer, and environmental projects shows a comprehensive approach to international relations. Well done!

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