"The international agenda has changed. Earlier there were issues like apartheid, decolonisation. But today the issues are terrorism, drugs, environment. The NAM has to be reinvented to face these issues, to address the problems of the first decade of the 21st century," he told PTI.
Singh is on a three-day official visit to Hanoi to attend the Joint Commission Meeting and the 50th anniversary celebrations of the historic meeting between Nehru and Ho Chi Minh.
India to focus on economic cooperation at NAM
The movement has to come up with new ideas. It will always remain relevant, he stressed noting that even with the disappearance of Warsaw Pact, NATO still remained relevant. The Vietnamese foreign minister, Nguyen Dy Nien, too was of the firm view that the Non Aligned Movement still was an important force.
"After the cold war many people thought NAM won't have a role to play anymore, but we later realised that non-alignement can play an important role," he said. "The NAM is revitalising again and the role of members like India is very, very important for the movement."