WASHINGTON: U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken will raise human rights issues with officials in India when he visits the country next week, a senior State Department official said on Friday.
Dean Thompson, the department’s acting assistant secretary for South and Central Asian affairs, told reporters that the United States has shared values with India on the matter of human rights, however.
It will be Blinkenโs first visit to the worldโs largest democracy as President Joe Bidenโs secretary of state and he will meet on Wednesday with Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Foreign Minister Subrahmanyam Jaishankar.

Blinken will also visit Kuwait at the end of his July 26-29 trip.
On Blinkenโs agenda will be โIndo-Pacific engagement, shared regional security interests, shared democratic values, and addressing the climate crisisโ as well as the response to the coronavirus pandemic, the State Department said.
Blinken is also likely to discuss plans for an in-person summit of the so-called Quad. The grouping of India, Japan, Australia and the United States is seen as a counter to Chinaโs rising influence.

Asked on a call with reporters how high on the agenda human rights would be, given a citizenship law introduced by Modiโs Hindu nationalist party that critics say discriminates against Muslims, Thompson said the United States โwill raise it.โ
โWe will continue that conversation, because we firmly believe that we have more values in common on those fronts than we donโt,โ he said.

