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US envoy meets Modi, signalling end of boycott

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GANDHINAGAR: The U.S. ambassador to India on Thursday met Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi, who is the front-runner to be the country's next prime minister, a signal that Washington was ending a long boycott of him over sectarian violence in 2002.

Ambassador Nancy Powell met Modi in Gujarat's capital Gandhinagar. Television footage showed her shaking Modi's hand and smiling, while he gave her a bunch of red and yellow flowers.

The footage, released by the Gujarat government, also showed the two sitting in a meeting room at his residence accompanied by officials. There was no immediate word on what was discussed.

It was the highest-profile encounter between U.S. officials and Modi since the State Department revoked his visa in 2005 over riots in Gujarat three years previously. The violence erupted after 59 people, mostly Hindu pilgrims, were killed in a fire on a train. Hindu crowds subsequently killed at least 1,000 people, most of them Muslims.

Modi has always denied accusations that he allowed or even encouraged attacks on Muslims and a Supreme Court inquiry found no evidence to prosecute him.

It was not immediately known if the question of Modi's visa status came up at the meeting with Powell.

Modi's Bharatiya Janata Party is considered the favourite to form a government after a general election due by May. Most analysts do not expect the United States to uphold the visa ban if he does become the prime minister.

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