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Modi visits New Zealand as trade deal sparks India pushback

AFP
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Australia’s Prime Minister Anthony Albanese (R) talks with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi as they participate in an official welcoming ceremony at Government House Victoria in Melbourne on July 9, 2026. (Photo by MARTIN KEEP / AFP)

Australia’s Prime Minister Anthony Albanese (R) talks with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi as they participate in an official welcoming ceremony at Government House Victoria in Melbourne on July 9, 2026. (Photo by MARTIN KEEP / AFP)

WELLINGTON: India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi lands in New Zealand on Friday touting a free trade deal that has sparked a backlash despite promises it will unlock jobs and economic riches.


On the agenda are trade, tourism and sport -- but recent undercurrents of anti-migrant sentiment risk tarnishing his trip to a nation long proud of its tolerance.


New Zealand Prime Minister Christopher Luxon celebrated the signing in April of the free trade deal with the world's most populous nation, touting an export boom that would deliver jobs and investment in spades.


But not everyone is happy at the prospect.


Lawmakers in the populist New Zealand First Party, part of Luxon's governing coalition, railed against parts of the agreement covering migration and visas.


"I don't care how much criticism we get, I am just never going to agree with a butter chicken tsunami coming to New Zealand," government minister Shane Jones told a local radio show.


An Indian community leader accused Jones of "outright racism".


A prominent evangelical preacher went even further when he heard Modi would soon be arriving on New Zealand's shores.


Self-proclaimed "apostle" Brian Tamaki accused Modi of vilifying Christians in India -- and suggested New Zealanders should retaliate in kind.


'Denigrated' 

Indigenous Maori activist Che Wilson was earlier this year accused of insulting an Indian-born New Zealand lawmaker with a cultural "haka" performance that allegedly included several mocking references tinged by race.


Massey University anthropologist Sita Venkateswar said Modi was visiting as Indian-New Zealanders were being singled out and "denigrated".


"A 'butter chicken tsunami', slurs set to a haka, graffiti on a school wall -- South Asians are already the most frequent targets of racially motivated incidents in our data," she told AFP.


Despite the negative rhetoric about their ties from some quarters, New Zealand's Luxon has been promoting a welcoming image for Modi's visit to a country that is home to an Indian diaspora of about 300,000.