Norway Blacklisted Adani And Suddenly Modi Landed There After 43 Years. Coincidence?

SIBY JEYYA

For 43 long years, no indian Prime minister visited Norway. Then, suddenly, within weeks of one of the world’s biggest sovereign wealth funds blacklisting adani Green Energy, narendra modi landed there. And now, the questions are exploding across political circles.



norway is not just another european country. It controls one of the most powerful investment funds on Earth — a trillion-dollar giant built from oil wealth. The fund owns stakes in thousands of global companies, including tech titans like Apple, Microsoft, Amazon, and Nvidia. But the real reason this fund matters is its reputation. norway publicly projects itself as a country that avoids investing in companies accused of corruption, unethical practices, or human rights concerns.



That’s why the decision to blacklist adani Green Energy created such a political storm. Critics immediately began asking whether India’s diplomatic machinery suddenly became hyperactive because one businessman’s global image had taken a hit.



And then comes the timing.



The blacklisting happens. Headlines erupt. Political pressure builds. Within weeks, Modi visits norway after more than four decades of silence between indian Prime Ministers and Oslo. For the opposition ecosystem, this wasn’t diplomacy anymore — this became a chronology that people started connecting on their own.



The same pattern, critics argue, appeared in America too.



When allegations surdata-faced in U.S. courts involving Adani-linked bribery accusations, india simultaneously pushed forward sensitive trade discussions with Washington. Soon after, the case lost momentum, and fresh investment announcements followed. To many observers, it looked less like a coincidence and more like a system moving in sync.



That is the core accusation now echoing louder than ever: has India’s global diplomacy become too closely tied to protecting one corporate empire?



Supporters of Modi call this narrative politically motivated propaganda. But critics say the bigger problem is perception itself. Because once citizens begin believing that state power, trade negotiations, and foreign visits are revolving around billionaire interests, trust in institutions starts collapsing fast.



And that’s the real political danger here. Not just Adani. Not just Modi. But the growing belief that corporate power and political power are becoming impossible to separate.

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