Yes  This text is about Prime Minister Narendra Modi ended his three-nation tour on Friday by securing nuclear energy deals with the United States and France and asserting that India was open to doing business with any nation willing to abide by international laws.

Yes This text is about Prime Minister Narendra Modi ended his three-nation tour on Friday by securing nuclear energy deals with the United States and France and asserting that India was open to doing business with any nation willing to abide by international laws.

Yes This text is about Prime Minister Narendra Modi ended his three-nation tour on Friday by securing nuclear energy deals with the United States and France and asserting that India was open to doing business with any nation willing to abide by international laws.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi ended his three-nation tour on Friday by securing nuclear energy deals with the United States and France and asserting that India was open to doing business with any nation willing to abide by international laws.

Modi returned from the visits to France, Germany and Canada on a high note, having won over European capitals with his charm offensive and persuading them to back New Delhi's efforts to become a permanent member of an enlarged UN Security Council.

In Paris, Modi held talks with French President Francois Hollande, who offered his support for India's entry into the elite club. He also met his Canadian counterpart Stephen Harper and oversaw agreements worth billions of dollars, including a $3 billion (2.5 billion euros) deal with French nuclear giant Areva.

The contracts are part of an ambitious plan by Modi to build more than 200 reactors across India that will help it meet its soaring energy needs.

The Prime Minister also used his last appearance at the G20 summit before the next one in Turkey in October to highlight what he called India's growing influence on the world stage.

India is not only a country with an ancient civilisation, but has a significant role today in global affairs, Modi told reporters.

He repeated that India would only buy uranium from countries that followed international laws and nuclear regulations — comments directed at Iran after talks between Tehran and Delhi over buying Iranian gas.

The government of Prime Minister Narendra Modi ended his three-nation tour on Friday by securing nuclear energy deals with the United States and France and asserting that India was open to doing business with any nation willing to abide by international laws.

Modi returned from the visits to France, Germany and Canada on a high note, having won over European capitals with his charm offensive and persuading them to back New Delhi's efforts to become a permanent member of an enlarged UN Security Council.

In Paris, Modi held talks with French President Francois Hollande, who offered his support for India's entry into the elite club. He also met his Canadian counterpart Stephen Harper and oversaw agreements worth billions of dollars, including a $3 billion (2.5 billion euros) deal with French nuclear giant Areva.

The contracts are part of an ambitious plan by Modi to build more than 200 reactors across India that will help it meet its soaring energy needs.

The Prime Minister also used his last appearance at the G20 summit before the next one in Turkey in October to highlight what he called India's growing influence on the world stage.

India is not only a country with an ancient civilisation, but has a significant role today in global affairs, Modi told reporters.

He repeated that India would only buy uranium from countries that followed international laws and nuclear regulations — comments directed at Iran after talks between Tehran and Delhi over buying Iranian gas.


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Edward Lance Arellano Lorilla

CEO / Co-Founder

Enjoy the little things in life. For one day, you may look back and realize they were the big things. Many of life's failures are people who did not realize how close they were to success when they gave up.

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