Rwandan president
Paul Kagame has visited
India five times, including three private visits and two state visits. He made his first visit in December 2002 to receive an honorary doctorate from the
Vellore Institute of Technology. He made his second visit in January 2009 to participate as the chief guest at the India-Africa Business Forum organised by the
Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce & Industry. Kagame visited
New Delhi again in November 2014 to participate in the India Economic Forum, and also met with President
Pranab Mukherjee during the visit. Kagame visited
Gandhinagar,
Gujarat in January 2017 to attend the
Vibrant Gujarat summit, and met Prime Minister
Narendra Modi on the sidelines of the summit. Kagame visited
Delhi on 9-12 March 2018 to participate in the founding conference of the
International Solar Alliance.
Rwandan Prime Minister Bernard Makuza participated in the Vibrant Gujarat Summit in January 2011. He visited India again in October 2011 to explore new investment opportunities accompanied by a 25 member business delegation. In April 2012, Defence Minister Gen. James Kaberebe led a three-member delegation to India to attend
DefExpo India 2012. He also met with his Indian counterpart and discussed possible future cooperation between the two countries in the field of defence. Speaker of the Parliament of Rwanda
Rose Mukantabana attended the 7th Meeting of Women Speakers of Parliament held in New Delhi in October 2012. Prime Minister
Anastase Murekezi visited India in October 2015 to attend the 3rd
India-Africa Forum Summit. Ansari also met with President Kagame, Prime Minister Anastase Murekezi, and President of the
Rwandan Senate Bernard Makuza. Makuza visited India in July 2018, met with Vice-President
Venkaiah Naidu and signed an MoU for cooperation between the Senate and the
Rajya Sabha. Narendra Modi became the first
Indian Prime Minister to visit Rwanda on 23-24 July 2018. Several bilateral agreements were signed during the visit including MoUs on defence co-operation, dairy co-operation, leather co-operation, cultural exchange, cooperation in agriculture and animal resources, and a bilateral trade agreement. India also extended
lines of credit worth
million for the development of industrial parks and expansion of Kigali SEZ, and million for financing an agriculture project in Rwanda. Modi made several other commitments to assist Rwanda including gifting 100,000 books of the
National Council of Educational Research and Training, setting up a task force in the field of digital education and an e-library, support for digitalization and online access of education books and related learning material, establishing an Entrepreneurship Development Centre in Kigali, providing 25 fully funded slots for Rwandans to attend training in dairy production and processing in India, a gift of 200 cows worth to the Rwandan Government's Girinka programme which aims to provide one cow to every poor Rwandan family, and donations of to the
Kigali Genocide Memorial and the Imbuto Foundation for the education of girls. ==Economic relations ==