Headlines
Modi in Mongolia in first-ever visit by an Indian PM
Ulan Bator, May 16
Prime Minister Narendra
Modi on Saturday landed here in the Mongolian capital in the first-ever
visit by an Indian prime minister.
Modi arrived here from
Shanghai in the second leg of his three-nation visit. He concluded a
three-day visit to China on Saturday that also took him to Beijing and
Xi'an.
He was received at the airport by Mongolian Foreign Minister L. Purevsuren.
Mongolia,
a landlocked country between China and Russia, has a population of over
2.9 million. More than half of the population follow Buddhism, and
about three percent follow Islam and 2.2 percent Christianity, while 2.9
percent are Shamanist.
With a land area slightly smaller than
Alaska, it has a density of around 1.7 people per square km - among the
lowest population densities among independent countries.
Mongolia is nicknamed the "Land of Blue Skies", as it has around 250 sunny days.
India has close ties with Mongolia from centuries.
While
Buddhism was spread to Mongolia by Ashoka and his disciples, Mughal
emperor Babur was a descendent of Genghis Khan, founder of the Mongol
empire.
Modi will spend Sunday in Mongolia and address the
Mongolian parliament, which will be opened on a holiday, in a special
gesture.
The prime minister would start his day by presenting a
sapling of the Bodhi tree to the chief abbot of the Gandan Monastery in
Ulan Bator.
He will meet Mongolian Prime Minister Chimed Saikhanbileg for talks after which many agreements are to be inked.
Modi will also meet the speaker of the Mongolian parliament.
He will meet President Tsakhiagiin Elbegdorj and attend a banquet lunch in his honour.
Modi
will later lay the foundation stone for an IT centre and attend a mini
Naadam festival - a national sporting festival and watch wrestling,
archery and horse racing events in an open arena.
Modi will also address a community reception and banquet in Ulan Bator.