Modi addresses Seychelles parliament, marks 50 years of India ties
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Sunday, 28 June became the first Indian Prime Minister to address the National Assembly of Seychelles, delivering a landmark speech during his state visit to Victoria that underscored five decades of unbroken diplomatic partnership between India and the Seychelles. The address marked the Golden Jubilee of bilateral relations and the 20th foreign parliament Modi has addressed since taking office in 2014.
Fifty Years of Commitment
Drawing a direct line from independence to the present, Modi recalled that an Indian naval vessel, INS Nilgiri, was anchored at Port Victoria at the dawn of Seychelles' independence as a gesture of solidarity. INS Tarkash and INS Ikshak are currently docked at the same port to mark the Golden Jubilee. 'The passage of 50 years has changed many things, but it has not changed our commitment to one another,' Modi said in his address.
Maritime Security and the MAHASAGAR Vision
A central theme of the address was the Indian Ocean region (IOR) and the two nations' shared stake in its security. Modi emphasised that the defence forces, Coast Guards, and maritime agencies of both countries have trained and operated together for decades, and praised the professionalism of the Seychelles Defence Forces and the Seychelles Coast Guard.
He articulated India's strategic framework for the region under the acronym MAHASAGAR — Mutual And Holistic Advancement for Security And Growth Across Regions — describing it as a recognition that the futures of Indian Ocean nations are 'interconnected and interdependent.' Cooperation in maritime security, capacity building, hydrography, and maritime domain awareness, he said, reflects a shared commitment to a safer region.
A Historic First and a Personal Connection
Modi noted that Seychelles was the first Indian Ocean nation he visited as Prime Minister, in 2015, lending the current visit an added layer of continuity. His address to the National Assembly is the 20th foreign parliament he has addressed — a record for an Indian Prime Minister.
His parliamentary diplomacy began immediately after assuming office in 2014, with addresses to the legislatures of Bhutan, Nepal, Australia, and Fiji. Subsequent years saw him address the assemblies of Mauritius, Sri Lanka, Mongolia, the United Kingdom, and Afghanistan. He addressed the United States Congress in 2016 and again in 2023, making him the first Indian Prime Minister to address a Joint Session of the US Congress twice. Parliaments of Uganda (2018), the Maldives (2019), and Guyana (2024) were also part of this journey.
Bilateral Talks and What Comes Next
Earlier on Sunday, Modi met Seychelles President Patrick Herminie and the two leaders reviewed what officials described as 'remarkable' progress in the bilateral partnership. The meeting covered areas including trade, maritime cooperation, and development assistance.
With both sides reaffirming their commitment to the Indian Ocean's stability, the visit is expected to yield further agreements on maritime surveillance and capacity building — signalling that the next 50 years of the partnership will be shaped as much by strategic geography as by historical goodwill.