Indonesian FM Sugiono arrives in New Delhi to co-chair 8th Joint Commission Meeting with EAM Jaishankar
Bilateral meetings with ASEAN partners are CLAT favourites, so here's one. Indonesian Foreign Minister Sugiono is in New Delhi to co-chair the 8th India-Indonesia Joint Commission Meeting with External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar. So basically, a Joint Commission Meeting is a structured platform where two countries review their entire relationship, trade, defence, connectivity, all of it. Now the interesting bit, India and Indonesia share a Comprehensive Strategic Partnership, and Indonesia matters hugely for our Act East Policy and Indo-Pacific outreach. Bottom line for the exam, remember the 8th JCM, New Delhi, Jaishankar and Sugiono, and the term Comprehensive Strategic Partnership.
Updated- June 07, 2026 11:23 am IST - New Delhi
Indonesian Foreign Minister Sugiono arrives in New Delhi on June 7, 2026. Mr. Sugiono and EAM Dr. S. Jaishankar are to co-chair the 8th India-Indonesia Joint Commission Meeting. Photo: X/@MEAIndia
Indonesian Foreign Minister Sugiono has arrived in the national capital to co-chair the 8th India-Indonesia Joint Commission Meeting alongsideExternal Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar.
In a move to further consolidate the Comprehensive Strategic Partnership between India and Indonesia, the Indonesian Minister of Foreign Affairs, Mr. Sugiono, is set to hold crucial bilateral discussions aimed at expanding the scope of cooperation across multiple strategic sectors, according to an official statement.
Also Read :India with Indonesia: on ancient ties to a new phase
Accompanied by Indonesia’s lower house Representative Marlyn Maisarah, the Foreign Minister is leading a high-level delegation to the national capital. The highlight of the visit is the Joint Commission Meeting (JCM).
The meeting serves as a platform for both nations to review progress on commitments made during the State Visit of Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto in January 2025. The current discussions directly build upon a recent May 14 meeting, when Jaishankar met Indonesian Foreign Minister Sugiono in the national capital before the BRICS Foreign Ministers Meeting.
India and Indonesia — the two largest democracies in Southeast and South Asia — have seen their ties flourish since the elevation of the relationship to a Comprehensive Strategic Partnership in 2018. This latest visit comes at a pivotal time for regional cooperation, with both nations actively participating in various ASEAN-led mechanisms and initiatives, such as the ASEAN-India Comprehensive Strategic Partnership (2026-2030).
