Narendra Modi to meet Barack Obama in Washington in September: reports
New Delhi: Prime Minister Narendra Modi will visit Washington to meet President Barack Obama in September, according to newspaper reports on Thursday, signalling a new start in ties with a leader once denied a visa by the United States.
Modi, who swept to power in a general election last month, has accepted an invitation from Obama for two-way talks in Washington, the Times of India and the Hindustan Times said.
No comment was immediately available from the Indian government press office or from the U.S. embassy.
Both countries are keen to boost security and economic ties - the Obama administration has set a goal of quintupling annual trade to $500 billion.
Scheduling has still to be finalised, but the summit would represent an upgrade from earlier expectations that Modi, 63, would meet Obama on the sidelines of the annual United Nations general assembly in New York.
Modi, a former chief minister of Gujarat, had been refused a U.S. visa over Gujarat riots in 2002.
The U.S. ambassador to India met Modi earlier this year, as opinion polls showed the BJP was on course for an election victory. U.S. officials had said a visa and an invitation to meet would probably be forthcoming if Modi won.
Modi wants to cautiously open up the Indian economy to foreign investment to boost growth and job creation.
His government may announce as soon as next month that it will allow foreign online retailers to sell their own products in India, creating a major business opportunity for players such as Amazon.