logo
Airports, education, hospital… How India has been a neighbour hero to Maldives

Airports, education, hospital… How India has been a neighbour hero to Maldives

First Post25-07-2025
India has always been a good neighbour to the Maldives. It has not only aided the island nation in times of crises such as natural disasters or Covid-19, but also helped develop airports, ports and even a cricket stadium read more
After a contentious 2024 when ties between the two countries deteriorated, Prime Minister Narendra Modi has reached Male in the Maldives for a two-day visit during which he will attend the island country's 60th Independence Day celebrations as well as inaugurate several India-assisted development projects.
PM Modi's visit, which follows his UK trip where he signed the crucial India-UK Free Trade Agreement (FTA), comes on the invitation of Maldivian President Mohamed Muizzu.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
The PM's trip to the Maldives is being seen as a crucial step toward resetting ties between the two countries, which had come under serious strain after President Mohamed Muizzu — widely viewed as leaning towards China — took office nearly two years ago.
In the past, India and the Maldives have shared a 'close and cordial' relationship — External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar earlier was quoted as saying that the Maldives was a 'very concrete expression' of India's neighbourhood first policy.
In fact, India has always been a thoughtful neighbour — it has shown up during natural disasters and Covid-19 pandemic. New Delhi has also assisted the island nation in boosting its infrastructure, connectivity and healthcare, helping Maldivians dream big.
Here's a look at how India has been constantly putting its weight behind its neighbour.
Airports
India has been one of the Maldives' largest source of tourism; until the downturn of relations, over two lakh Indians visited the island nation. But, India has also helped in building tourism-related infrastructure in the Maldives.
For instance, it is involved in projects linked to airports: the Hanimaadhoo International Airport Redevelopment Project and the Gan International Airport Redevelopment Project. India has backed the Hanimaadhoo airport plan, the first-ever project outside the Greater Male Region. It is funded under the $800 million concessional Line of Credit (LoC) extended by the Government of India to the Maldives. The project includes the extension of the runway to 2,200 metres to allow A320s, and Boeing 737s to land, and the upgrade of terminals.
The expansion of the Gan International Airport is funded by Exim Bank. Image courtesy: @Ganairportco/X
The expansion of the Gan International Airport, which involves the construction of the air traffic control tower and a fire station and upgrading and renewing the current terminal, parking facilities, roads, duty-free shops and restaurants, is funded by India's Exim Bank, which gives LoC to countries for undertaking India-funded infrastructure projects. A Chennai-based construction and construction material manufacturing company won a $29 million contract to upgrade the airport and the work is expected to be completed by 2025.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
Island connectivity project
In August 2022, when then-Maldivian president Ibrahim Mohamed Solih was visiting, he and Prime Minister Narendra Modi virtually kick-started the India-funded Greater Male Connectivity Project (GMCP), dubbed the largest infrastructure initiative in the island nation.
The ongoing construction work at the Thilamale Bridge project near Male, that aims to link the capital Male with the islands of Villingli, Gulhifalhu and Thilafushi in the Maldives. AFP
This plan envisions a 6.74 km long bridge and causeway link to connect the capital city Male with the adjoining islands of Villingli, Gulhifalhu, and Thilafushi.
Developing water supply network
India is developing the Water Supply and Sewerage network across 34 islands of the Maldives. The project aims to enhance the water supply and sewerage facilities on the designated islands spanning across 16 atolls. The project is expected to directly benefit 35,000 people who will have access to uninterrupted and safe water supply. The other beneficiaries include numerous others in the atolls/surrounding islands who are affected by water shortages during the dry season. These people will receive timely supplies, according to a report in The Economic Times (ET).
Port development
India is engaged in the development of the Gulhifalhu Port in the Maldives. The outlay of the project is $400 million.
The island nation's main port in Male has one berth for cargo and is congested. Its handling capacity is stretched. The upcoming port at the nearby Gulhifalhu Island is expected to address this issue, according to a report in ET.
The Male port is congested and hence India is helping in the building of another one near Gulhifalhu Island. Image courtesy: Maldives Ports Limited
The port will be able to handle a capacity of 400,000 TEUs or 22-foot equivalent unit containers. It will also have a container terminal, general cargo terminal, port service quay, a warehouse, a domestic quay and an administration area, the report says.
The project is scheduled for completion in 2026 and is funded through the LoC facility provided by EXIM Bank.
Education and scholarships
India has also helped the island nation in the field of education. New Delhi helped set up an institute of technical education in 1996. It has also started a programme to provide training to Maldivian teachers and youth and for vocational training in a $5.3 million project.
India has also allotted 10 seats every year to the Maldives under its India Science and Research Fellowship programme.
A cancer hospital
India is building a 100-bed cancer hospital at Hulhumale, an island in the Maldives. The project includes a robust component of human resource development, the Indian embassy said when the announcement was made in 2020.
Until 2018, cancer care in the Maldives was handled by visiting oncologists from India. Even today, the island nation has a handful of cancer specialists. Many of its patients travel to India for advanced treatments under the public referral system called Aasandha, under which the Maldivian government funds treatments of its citizens overseas.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
'We have been collaborating with many hospitals in India, especially in the south of the country. A lot of patients travel to these hospitals for their treatment and it has been a good partnership,' Dr Amru Ahmed, consultant oncologist at Male's Indira Gandhi Memorial Hospital told ETHealthworld in June 2023.
Cricket stadium and other sports infrastructure
Hulhumale is also getting a modern cricket stadium courtesy of India. It will be equipped with the latest technology and will have the capacity to seat 22,000 spectators.
It was in March 2019, during then External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj's bilateral visit that Maldivian authorities requested Indian assistance for the construction of a cricket stadium.
A visualisation of the International Maldives Cricket Stadium, a collaborative effort between India and the Maldives. Image Courtesy: collagedesign.com
New Delhi is also helping in building a mega sporting infrastructure which will promote basketball, volleyball, table tennis, and netball, according to a report in WION.
India has offered $40 million LoC for sports infrastructure.
It's left to be seen if ties can be reset between India and the Maldives. But for now, Male has several reasons to be thankful to India.
With inputs from agencies
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Indian drugmakers seek exemption for generics from US supplies probe
Indian drugmakers seek exemption for generics from US supplies probe

Economic Times

time6 minutes ago

  • Economic Times

Indian drugmakers seek exemption for generics from US supplies probe

Mumbai: A US government probe into pharmaceutical imports and their implications on national security must exclude generic drugs from its purview, a business delegation from the Indian pharmaceutical industry told Union commerce minister Piyush Goyal at a meeting held last local industry's contention assumes significance in the backdrop of the impending India-US bilateral trade agreement and the uncertainty over reciprocal tariffs being imposed by the US government. So far, the US has exempted pharmaceutical imports from the proposed tariffs of 50%, half of which are to kick in on August 27. Experts said that the issues related to supplies of medicines from India to the US are critical given the plans of Prime Minister Narendra Modi to visit China for the upcoming Shanghai Cooperation Organisation meeting later this month in Tianjin. In April, under Section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act, 1962, the US government had initiated an investigation into imports of medicines to the country, sparking concerns over potential supply chain disruptions and pricing volatility there. The law grants authority to the US President to impose restrictions on such imports if those are deemed to threaten US national security. People familiar with the mater told ET that the meeting with the pharmaceutical industry was called by the commerce ministry to discuss a range of issues, including ways to tackle abrupt disruptions and to strengthen the industry with closer attention to new research and innovation. A note in May from global consulting firm EY said that historically, Section 232 has been used to justify tariffs on steel, aluminium and automobiles.

INDIA bloc decides to field VP candidate, weighs DMK-backed scientist Mylswamy Annadurai among options
INDIA bloc decides to field VP candidate, weighs DMK-backed scientist Mylswamy Annadurai among options

Economic Times

time20 minutes ago

  • Economic Times

INDIA bloc decides to field VP candidate, weighs DMK-backed scientist Mylswamy Annadurai among options

New Delhi: Leaders of many INDIA bloc parties held an online meeting on Monday evening and decided in principle to field an Opposition vice-presidential candidate. While some probable names - including DMK-floated Mylswamy Annadurai, a space scientist from Tamil Nadu who had worked with ISRO - were discussed, the leaders decided to hold more talks before finalising the Opposition candidate, perhaps by president Mallikarjun Kharge was authorised by the meeting to reach out to leaders such as Mamata Banerjee, Tejashwi Yadav and others. The bloc leaders may meet on Tuesday afternoon to finalise the name was circulated by some DMK members at the suggestion of their leader MK Stalin. DMK, some leaders say, would prefer a Tamil candidate in order to deal with BJP-AIADMK bid to play on the Tamil identity of NDA nominee CP Radhakrishnan. DMK MP Tiruchi Siva's name was also floated by some sections. Trinamool leadership is reportedly keen on having a non-politician as Opposition candidate as a way of navigating through the fault lines within the Opposition camps. With DMK leadership on board, there were also suggestions of fielding a candidate from Andhra Pradesh or Maharashtra, where BJP has allies. Some argue that Opposition should make the contest against Radhakrishnan a "fight against his RSS background". Since Radhakrishnan is currently Maharashtra governor, a fact that weighs in the mind of some INDIA bloc leaders, some Opposition circles circulated the name of a former Dalit MP, but it didn't receive much traction. The odds in the election are clearly against the Opposition as the ruling NDA is set to bag the post comfortably.

Peter Navarro to India: Act like a US partner or pay the price
Peter Navarro to India: Act like a US partner or pay the price

Economic Times

time21 minutes ago

  • Economic Times

Peter Navarro to India: Act like a US partner or pay the price

Synopsis Peter Navarro has criticized India's crude oil imports from Russia, deeming them "opportunistic" and warning of consequences for the US-India strategic partnership. He alleges India's actions are financing Russia's war in Ukraine and jeopardizing access to US markets. These remarks precede a postponed US trade negotiation visit and potential tariffs on Indian goods due to continued Russian oil purchases. Reuters Peter Navarro, Senior Counselor for Trade and Manufacturing for U.S. President Donald Trump, speaks to the media outside the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., April 30, 2025. REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein/ File Photo New Delhi: US President Donald Trump's trade adviser Peter Navarro on Monday criticised India's crude oil imports from Russia, calling the move "opportunistic" and warning that if India "wants to be treated as a strategic partner of the US, it needs to start acting like one".In an opinion piece in the Financial Times, Navarro alleged that India was "now cosying up to both Russia and China" and argued that New Delhi's Russian crude purchases must stop as they were financing Moscow's war in Ukraine. His comments come ahead of Prime Minister Narendra Modi's meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping later this month, even as Chinese foreign minister Wang Yi visits New Delhi for talks on the disputed border. "This two-pronged policy will hit India where it hurts-its access to US markets - even as it seeks to cut off the financial lifeline it has extended to Russia's war effort," Navarro said India's reliance on Russian crude was "opportunistic and deeply corrosive of global efforts to isolate Putin's war economy". The remarks assume significance as US trade negotiators have postponed their planned August 25-29 visit for the sixth round of Bilateral Trade Agreement talks, the first tranche of which is targeted for conclusion by autumn. Trump has already imposed a 50% tariff on Indian goods, including a 25% penal levy for continued purchases of Russian oil, despite the external affairs ministry's assertion that India is being unfairly singled out while the US and EU continue to source energy from the 25% tariff on Indian goods entering the US took effect on August 7, the additional 25%, announced as penalty for crude and defence imports from Russia, will kick in on August 27. "India acts as a global clearing house for Russian oil, converting embargoed crude into high-value exports while giving Moscow the dollars it needs," Navarro wrote, adding that it was risky to transfer cutting-edge US military capabilities to a country "cosying up to both Russia and China".

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store