Blitz Bureau
Fresh from hosting Prime Minister Narendra Modi as guest of honour at its 50th independence anniversary, Seychelles has invited Indian businesses to use the archipelago as a strategic gateway to Africa and West Asia — the latest thread in a widening Indian Ocean and Africa outreach.
The Seychelles high commissioner highlighted the island nation’s position astride key sea lanes connecting Asia, Africa and the Middle East, and pointed to trade and investment opportunities opened during Modi’s visit. It follows a broader regional push that has taken India’s leadership to Jordan, Ethiopia and Oman in recent months.
India’s Indian Ocean strategy is increasingly about commerce as much as security — turning goodwill into supply chains, ports and investment.
At a Glance
- Occasion: Modi guest of honour at Seychelles’ 50th independence
- Offer: Gateway for Indian business into Africa & West Asia
- Oman: India–Oman free-trade pact nearing completion
- Jordan / Ethiopia: Trade target doubled to $5 bn; ties raised to Strategic Partnership
The engagement fits a pattern in which India pairs diplomacy with economic substance — free-trade talks with Oman, a target to double bilateral trade with Jordan to $5 billion over five years, and an elevated Strategic Partnership with Ethiopia. For African and Indian Ocean partners, India offers development finance, digital public infrastructure and market access.
The constructive opportunity is delivery: converting warm summits into concrete projects — ports, fintech rails and manufacturing links — that leave lasting capacity on the ground for partner economies.













