As far as his visit progressed, the Indian government has heard of anti-Rohingya conversations.
After the attack on suspected Rohingya rebels in several police outposts of Rakhine state on August 25, the Indian Foreign Ministry said in a statement: "India will always be with Myanmar in the fight against terrorism."
Before that, BJP's Minister of State for Home Affairs Kiren Rijuju announced that 40 thousand Rohingya people living in India will be expelled. Although 16,000 United Nations registered refugees in Rohingya in India, Mr Rijuju said, "There is no meaning of registration of the UN, they are all illegal to us."
The BBC's former journalist Subir Bhaumik in Calcutta, who is currently in Yangon in Myanmar, says that just before the visit of Indian Prime Minister Modi, the value of this statement from Delhi is more intimate with Buddhist people, Myanmar.
India wants to integrate with majority Rohingya anti-Rohingya attitude of majority Burmese Mr Bhowmick says the BJP government wants to use China's silence on Rohingya crisis
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