New Delhi: India and Indonesia are prepared to significantly scale up their comprehensive strategic partnership across digital governance, advanced military hardware, and critical mineral supply chains. As part of the highly anticipated outcomes from Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s state visit to Jakarta, Indonesia is set to officially adopt Indian election management technology to co-develop a customized Electronic Voting Machine (EVM) system. The major technological endorsement follows a grand ceremonial reception hosted for the Indian Prime Minister by Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto at the Istana Merdeka presidential palace on Tuesday.
The collaborative initiative to establish an Indonesian EVM framework serves as an international validation of India’s indigenous electoral infrastructure and digital governance models. Alongside this administrative transition, Jakarta is rapidly deepening its bilateral defence footprint by expanding its inventory of the BrahMos supersonic cruise missile system. Sources indicate that New Delhi will supply additional coastal missile batteries to the Southeast Asian nation to fortify its maritime security infrastructure. This expansion aligns with an additional high-value procurement contract for India’s indigenous Astra beyond-visual-range air-to-air missiles, whose recent operational deployment during the intense multi-day conflict of Operation Sindoor significantly bolstered global confidence in India’s advanced weapon systems.
The bilateral roadmap extends deep into industrial investments, with India outlining a framework to establish manufacturing setups within Indonesia focused on steel, nickel, and rare-earth permanent magnets. The industrial pipeline aims to build robust, resilient supply chains crucial for electric mobility, renewable energy, and precision manufacturing across the Indo-Pacific. Furthermore, maritime connectivity is poised for a substantial upgrade as both nations finalize the joint development blueprint for the strategically vital Sabang Port near the Strait of Malacca. Situated approximately 100 miles from India’s upcoming Great Nicobar transshipment project, the Sabang infrastructure will bolster commercial logistics while anchoring the strategic presence of both democracies along the world’s most critical maritime trade lanes.