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India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Bhutan’s King Jigme Khesar Namgyel Wangchuck greet each other during the conferment ceremony of the Order of the Druk Gyalpo award to Modi in Bhutan’s capital Thimpu on March 22. Photo: AFP

Is India’s billion-dollar aid to Bhutan aimed at curbing China’s influence?

  • India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi has made his recent visit to Bhutan a priority despite the possibility of violating pre-election rules
  • China is keen to expand its influence in Bhutan but its territorial dispute with the South Asian country is seen as a barrier, analysts say
India
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s recently concluded visit to Bhutan where he unveiled a billion-dollar aid package for the South Asian country is seen as a move to counter China’s growing influence in the region.
Modi’s visit from March 22-23 was significant as he had taken a break from hustings ahead of India’s parliamentary elections beginning next month despite potentially violating pre-election rules, political analysts say.

“Given that Bhutan is currently facing economic challenges, India understands its needs and ambitions,” said Aditya Gowdara Shivamurthy, an associate fellow of the strategic studies program at the Observer Research Foundation (ORF).

The visit underscores India’s eagerness to deepen ties with Bhutan, particularly against the backdrop of Beijing’s rising financial and diplomatic clout aimed at challenging New Delhi’s regional dominance.

Questions have been raised about Modi’s visit given the limitations on the incumbent government imposed by the Election Commission of India. A ruling government in India is deemed an interim administration during the election season until results are announced on June 4.

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During the pre-announcement election period, Indian leaders are obliged not to unveil major policy decisions or make official overseas visits, according to analysts.

Subramaniam Swamy, a former parliamentarian who is a member of the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), has criticised Modi’s visit. “It is silly that a prime minister wants to go to a foreign country when the formalities of general elections have been set. Modi is not a prime minister but an ad hoc PM,” he wrote on X, formerly Twitter.

Inclement weather in Bhutan almost derailed Modi’s visit but Delhi proceeded with its plan by postponing it by a day.

During the visit, Modi pledged aid of 100 billion rupees (US$1.2 billion) to Bhutan over the next five years, double the amount of the country’s previous five-year plan.

Modi’s trip came just a week after Bhutan’s Prime Minister Tshering Tobgay held talks in Delhi with top Indian leaders.

India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi speaking with his Bhutan’s counterpart Tshering Tobgay (left) during a meeting in New Delhi. Photo: AFP

A highlight of the Bhutan trip was when King Jigme Khesar Namgyel Wangchuck conferred upon Modi the country’s highest civilian award, the Order of the Druk Gyalpo. Modi was the first foreign national to receive this honour.

The Bhutanese royal family also held a dinner for Modi, the first Indian prime minister to be hosted at the palace.

Strategic importance

Situated in the eastern Himalayas, landlocked Bhutan holds significant strategic importance for India since both countries established diplomatic ties in 1968.

Bhutan is arguably the only regional country that remains under Delhi’s orbit of influence while ties with Nepal, the Maldives, and Sri Lanka have cooled under Modi’s tenure.

“Bhutan holds an extremely important position in India’s neighbourhood policy,” said Smruti Pattanaik, a research fellow at the Delhi-based think tank Manohar Parrikar Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses.

“Bhutan receives the largest development fund that India gives. India had funded the first two five-year plans [of its neighbour]. Several infrastructure projects are coming up,” she added.

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During the visit, Modi attended the inauguration of a women’s and children’s hospital in the Bhutanese capital Thimphu. He also promised to build an airport and two rail lines in Bhutan to meet its economic and transportation needs.

ORF’s Shivamurthy noted the Bhutanese community is expected to benefit from India’s funding through projects such as a green economic zone in the town of Gelephu bordering India’s Assam state that is expected to create jobs and a Gyalsung training program targeting Bhutanese youths.

The possibility of China extending its regional influence into Bhutan, however, is a scenario that India has to contend with. Bhutan is the only South Asian country that does not have diplomatic ties with China. But with its sizeable economy, China is well-placed to provide financial assistance to Bhutan, analysts say.

However, China’s encroachment into Bhutan’s territory will complicate its attempt to foster closer economic ties with the South Asian country.

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Rajneesh Singh, a security analyst who is a former army officer, noted that China has been making claims on Bhutanese territory in the Beyul and the Menchuma Valleys in recent decades including redrawing its maps of the region and sending Tibetan herders to occupy the areas.

“It provides a facade of a responsible country during negotiations, simultaneously it is surreptitiously changing the status quo on the ground by occupying Bhutanese territory,” Singh said.

Trade between India and Bhutan surged to US$1.4 billion in 2021-2022, or 80 per cent of Bhutan’s total trade, according to data from India’s embassy in Thimphu. In a report by the state-run Global Times last December, an analyst claimed that China’s trade with Bhutan had risen to a quarter of the South Asian country’s total trade, without providing any data.

A senior official from India’s external affairs ministry, who declined to be named, said the increasing economic presence of China in Bhutan is a matter of serious concern for Delhi.

“China can afford to throw an enormous amount of cash at countries but India needs to find alternative methods to keep countries like Bhutan in our confidence,” the official said.

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