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Brazil–India relations are the bilateral relations between Brazil and India. Brazil was the first Latin American nation to establish diplomatic relations with India in 1948. The ties were elevated to a strategic partnership in 2006, opening a new phase in the bilateral relations. [1] Both the countries are members of BRICS, G-20, IBSA and G4.
In 2015, total trade between Brazil and Italy totaled US$7.4 billion. [4] Italy is one of Brazil's top ten largest global trusted trading partners. In 2013, Italian investments in Brazil totaled US$17.9 billion. [4] Italian car makers such as Ferrari, Fiat and Lamborghini have a presence in Brazil, as well as Italian fashion and food products.
India also enjoys strong military relations with several other countries, including the United Kingdom, the United States, [68] Japan, [69] Singapore, Brazil, South Africa and Italy. [70] In addition, India operates an airbase in Tajikistan, [71] signed a landmark defence accord with Qatar in 2008, [72] and has leased out Assumption Island from ...
The two countries signed the Brazil-Hungary Cultural Agreement in 1992. Iceland: 1952: Brazil is accredited to Iceland from its embassy in Oslo, Norway and maintains an honorary consulate in Reykjavík. Iceland is accredited to Brazil from its Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Reykjavík and maintains honorary consulates in Rio de Janeiro and São ...
BRICS is an intergovernmental organization consisting of ten countries—Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa, Egypt, Ethiopia, Indonesia, Iran and the United Arab Emirates.
An agreement on how artificial intelligence should be regulated in the future has been reached by Germany, France and Italy, according to a joint paper seen by Reuters, which is expected to ...
G8: US, UK, France, Germany, Italy, Canada, Russia, and Japan, the eight major advanced economies as reported by the IMF, which became the G7 after expelling Russia following the 2014 invasion of Crimea. G8+5, the G8 nations, plus the five leading emerging economies (Brazil, China, India, Mexico, and South Africa).
Brazilian and Mexican authorities said on Monday they see the need to revise and expand their current trade agreements, in a push to strengthen the ties between the two largest economies in Latin ...