List of international trips made by prime ministers of India

The following is a list of international prime ministerial trips made by prime ministers of India in reverse chronological order.

Jawaharlal Nehru (1947–1964)

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Lal Bahadur Shastri (1964–1966)

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Country Areas visited Date(s) Purpose(s) Notes
  Egypt Cairo 5–10 October 1964 Conference of Heads of State or Government of the Non-Aligned Countries [1]
  Pakistan Karachi October 1964 On his way back from Cairo, the Prime Minister made a brief halt at Karachi and had discussions with the President of Pakistan[1]
    Nepal Kathmandu
Mithila
23–25 April 1965 [2]
  Soviet Union 11–19 May 1965 [2]
  Canada Ottawa
Montreal
June 1965 [2]
  United Kingdom London 17–25 June 1965 Commonwealth Prime Ministers' Conference [2]
  Yugoslavia July 1965 [2]
  Burma 20–23 December 1965 [2]
  Soviet Union Tashkent 4–10 January 1966 Tashkent Declaration Shastri died of a heart attack in Tashkent on 11 January 1966.[2]

Indira Gandhi (1966–77; 1980–84)

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Morarji Desai (1977–1979)

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Country Areas visited Date(s) Purpose(s) Notes
  Australia February 1978 Regional Commonwealth Conference [3]
  Iran Tehran 7 June 1977 [3]
  United Kingdom London 8–15 June 1977 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting 1977 [3]
  France Paris June 1977 [3]
  Soviet Union October 1977 [3]
    Nepal November–December 1977 [3]
  Iran Tehran June 1978 Stop-over [4]
  Belgium Brussels June 1978 [4]
  United Kingdom London June 1978 [4]
  United States New York City, San Francisco, Omaha 12–15 June 1978 UN General Assembly [5][6]
  Kenya Nairobi August 1978 Funeral of Jomo Kenyatta [4]
  Sri Lanka February 1979 Chief guest on Independence Day [4]
  Bangladesh Dhaka 16–18 April 1979 [7]
  West Germany Frankfurt June 1979 [8]
  Soviet Union 10–14 June 1979 [8]
  Poland 14–16 June 1979 [8]
  Czechoslovakia 16–18 June 1979 [8]
  Yugoslavia 18–21 June 1979 [8]

Charan Singh (1979–1980)

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Charan Singh did not make any state visits as Prime Minister.

Rajiv Gandhi (1984–1989)

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Country Areas visited Date(s) Purpose(s) Notes
  Soviet Union March 1985 [9]
  Bangladesh Dhaka 2 June 1985 [7][9]
  Egypt June 1985 [9]
  Algeria June 1985 [9]
  United States Washington, D.C. 11–15 June 1985 [5][9]
   Switzerland Geneva 17 June 1985 71st International Labour Conference [9]
  France June 1985 [9]
  Bhutan Thimpu September 1985 [9]
  Bahamas Nassau 16–20 October 1985 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting 1985 [9]
  Cuba 21–22 October 1985 [9]
  United States New York City 22–24 October 1985 Met with President Reagan on 23 October in New York City, at reception and luncheon at the U.N.[5][9]
  Soviet Union Moscow October 1985 [9]
  Netherlands October 1985 [9]
  United Kingdom London October 1985 [9]
  Oman Muscat 17–18 November 1985 15th Anniversary of Accession to the Throne by Sultan Qaboos [9]
  Vietnam Hanoi 27 November 1985 [9]
  Japan Tokyo 28 November–1 December 1985 [9]
  Bangladesh Dhaka 7–8 December 1985 1st SAARC summit [7][9]
  Maldives Malé 7–9 February 1986 [9][10]
  Zambia May 1986 [10]
  Zimbabwe May 1986 [10]
  Angola May 1986 [10]
  Tanzania May 1986 [10]
  Mauritius July 1986 [10]
  Mexico 7–9 August 1986 [10]
  Czechoslovakia Prague 10 August 1986 On his way back from Mexico.[10]
  United Kingdom London August 1986 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting 1986 [10]
  Zimbabwe Harare September 1986 Eighth Summit of the Non-Aligned [10]
  Indonesia October 1986 [10]
  Thailand October 1986 [10]
  Australia October 1986 [10]
  New Zealand October 1986 [10]
  Soviet Union 2–4 July 1987 [11]
  Sri Lanka Colombo 29–30 July 1987 [11]
  Netherlands October 1987 Transit visit [11]
  Japan Tokyo October 1987 Transit visit Gandhi visited Japan, Canada and USA from 11 to 21 October 1987.[11]
  Canada Vancouver October 1987 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting 1987 [11]
  United States Washington, D.C. 19–20 October 1987 UN General Assembly [5][11]
    Nepal Kathmandu 2–4 November 1987 SAARC Summit [11]
  Burma Rangoon 15–16 December 1987 [11]
  Pakistan Peshawar January 1988 Funeral of Khan Abdul Gaffar Khan
  Sweden January 1988 Six Nation Initiative [11]
  Japan Tokyo April 1988 [12]
  Vietnam 16 April 1988 [12]
  Hungary 10–12 June 1988 [12]
  West Germany June 1988 [12]
  United States June 1988 UN General Assembly [12]
  Syria June 1988 [12]
  Yugoslavia July 1988 Yugoslavia, Jordan, Spain and Turkey 11 to 20 July 1988.[12]
  Jordan July 1988 [12]
  Spain July 1988 [12]
  Turkey July 1988 [12]
  Bhutan 23–27 September 1988 [12]
  China 19–23 December 1988 [12]
  Pakistan Islamabad 29–31 December 1988 4th SAARC Summit [12]
    Nepal December 1988 [13]
  Pakistan 16–17 July 1989 [13]
  France Paris July 1989 Bicentenary celebrations of the French Revolution [13]
  Soviet Union Moscow July 1989 [13]
  Yugoslavia Belgrade 3–8 September 1989 9th NAM Summit [13]

V. P. Singh (December 1989 – November 1990)

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Country Areas visited Date(s) Purpose(s) Notes
  Namibia Windhoek March 1990 Namibian Independence Day celebrations [14]
  Malaysia Kuala Lumpur 1–4 June 1990 1st G-15 summit [14]
  Maldives Malé 22–24 June 1990 State visit [14]
  Soviet Union July 1990 State visit [14]

Chandra Shekhar (November 1990 – June 1991)

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Country Areas visited Date(s) Purpose(s) Notes
  Maldives Malé 22–24 November 1990 6th SAARC Summit [14]
    Nepal Kathmandu, Janakpur, Biratnagar 13–15 February 1991 State visit [14]

P. V. Narasimha Rao (1991–1996)

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Country Areas visited Date(s) Purpose(s) Notes
  Germany Bonn September 1991 [15]
  Zimbabwe Harare October 1991 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting 1991 [15]
  France November 1991 [15]
  Venezuela Caracas November 1991 2nd G-15 Summit [15]
  Sri Lanka Colombo December 1991 SAARC Summit [15]
  United States New York City January 1992 UN Security Council meeting Met with President George H. W. Bush during a U.N. Security Council summit in New York City.[5][15]
   Switzerland Davos 2 February 1992 [15]
  Mauritius Port Louis March 1992 Chief guest on the occasion Mauritius proclaiming itself a republic [15][16]
  Brazil Rio de Janeiro 3–14 June 1992 Earth Summit [16]
  Spain Madrid 10 June 1992 Transit visit [16]
  Portugal Lisbon 15 June 1992 Transit visit [16]
  Japan Tokyo 22–26 June 1992 [16]
  Indonesia Jakarta September 1992 10th Non-Aligned Summit [16]
  France Paris 28–30 September 1992 [16]
    Nepal Kathmandu 19–21 October 1992 [16]
  Tunisia Tunis 20 November 1992 On his way to Dakar to attend G-15 Summit, Rao stopped in Tunis on 20 November.[16]
  Senegal Dakar 21–23 November 1992 3rd G-15 Summit [16]
  Bangladesh Dhaka 10–11 April 1993 7th SAARC Summit [17]
  Thailand Bangkok April 1993 [17]
  Uzbekistan 23–25 May 1993 [17]
  Kazakhstan 25–26 May 1993 [17]
  Oman Muscat June 1993 [18][19]
  Bhutan 21–22 August 1993 [17]
  South Korea Seoul 9–11 September 1993 [17]
  China Beijing September 1993 [17]
  Iran Tehran 20–23 September 1993 [17]
   Switzerland Davos 1 February 1994 World Economic Forum [17]
  Germany 2–5 February 1994 [17][19]
  United Kingdom 13–16 March 1994 [19]
  United States 14–20 May 1994 [19]
  China June 1994 Inauguration of the Festival of India in China [19]
  Russia 29 June–2 July 1994 [19]
  Vietnam September 1994 [19]
  Singapore September 1994 [19]
  Denmark Copenhagen 8–11 March 1995 World Summit for Social Development and State visit [20]
  Maldives Malé April 1995 [20]
  France 11–14 June 1995 [20]
  Malaysia August 1995 [20]
  Turkmenistan 19–21 September 1995 [20]
  Kyrgyzstan 21–23 September 1995 [20]
  Egypt 15–16 October 1995 [20]
  Colombia Cartagena 16–20 October 1995 11th NAM summit [20]
  United States New York City October 1995 UN General Assembly [20]
  Argentina Buenos Aires 5–7 November 1995 G-15 Summit [20]
  Burkina Faso November 1995 [20]
  Ghana November 1995 [20]

Atal Bihari Vajpayee (1996; 1998–2004)

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H. D. Deve Gowda (June 1996 – April 1997)

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Country Areas visited Date(s) Purpose(s) Notes
  Italy Rome 15–17 November 1996 World Food Summit [21]
  Zimbabwe Harare November 1996 6th G-15 Summit [21]
  Bangladesh 6–7 January 1997 [21]
  Mauritius February 1997 [21]
   Switzerland Davos February 1997 World Economic Forum
  Russia 24–26 March 1997 [21]

Inder Kumar Gujral (April 1997 – March 1998)

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Country Areas visited Date(s) Purpose(s) Notes
  Maldives Malé 12-14 May 1997 SAARC
  United States New York City 22 September 1997 Met with President Clinton at the UN General Assembly in New York City .[5]
  Egypt Cairo 24-25 October 1997
  Uganda Kampala 26-27 October 1997
  South Africa Johannesburg &Durban 28-31 October 1997
  Bangladesh Dhaka 14–15 January 1998 [22]

Manmohan Singh (2004–2014)

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Narendra Modi (2014–present)

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References

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  2. ^ a b c d e f g "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 1 October 2018. Retrieved 20 February 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
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  4. ^ a b c d e "Annual Reports Prior to 1999 : Annual Report 1978-79".
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  6. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 3 May 2015. Retrieved 20 February 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  7. ^ a b c "Bilateral Visits". Archived from the original on 8 April 2017. Retrieved 29 March 2017.
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  13. ^ a b c d e "Annual Reports Prior to 1999 : Annual Report 1989-90". Archived from the original on 16 April 2021. Retrieved 20 February 2022.
  14. ^ a b c d e f "Annual Reports Prior to 1999 : Annual Report 1990-91". Archived from the original on 16 April 2021. Retrieved 20 February 2022.
  15. ^ a b c d e f g h "Annual Reports Prior to 1999 : Annual Report 1991-92". Archived from the original on 16 April 2021. Retrieved 20 February 2022.
  16. ^ a b c d e f g h i j "Annual Reports Prior to 1999 : Annual Report 1992-93". Archived from the original on 19 January 2022. Retrieved 20 February 2022.
  17. ^ a b c d e f g h i j "Annual Reports Prior to 1999 : Annual Report 1993-94". Archived from the original on 3 May 2015. Retrieved 20 February 2022.
  18. ^ "Indian Embassy Oman-Trade & Investment". Archived from the original on 4 December 2016. Retrieved 29 March 2017.
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  20. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l "Annual Reports Prior to 1999 : Annual Report 1995-96". Archived from the original on 20 April 2021. Retrieved 20 February 2022.
  21. ^ a b c d e "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 1 October 2018. Retrieved 20 February 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  22. ^ "Annual Reports Prior to 1999 : Annual Report 1998-1999". Archived from the original on 16 April 2021. Retrieved 20 February 2022.