New York: India’s External Affairs Minister, Sushma Swaraj, reached here today to represent India at the 72nd annual UN General Assembly (UNGA) session. Swaraj was received at the airport by the Indian Ambassador to the US, Navtej Sarna, and India’s permanent Representative to the United Nations Syed Akbaruddin. She will address the UN General Assembly on September 23. Ms Swaraj is leading a high-powered Indian delegation. The Minister will hold a series of meetings with her counterparts from several countries during her week-long stay here and expected to hold about 20 bilateral and trilateral meetings with leaders attending the session. Mr Akbaruddin said earlier that the issues of climate change, terrorism, people-centric migration and peacekeeping were the key areas for discussions. She is expected to kick off her official engagement today itself with a trilateral meeting with her American and Japanese counterparts Rex Tillerson, and Taro Kono respectively. In a day jam-packed with consecutive meetings, Swaraj will also participate in a high-level meeting on UN reforms, hosted and chaired by US President Donald Trump. Aimed at lending momentum to cooperation between the three countries, the meeting assumes significant amid China flexing its muscles in the region. India is among the 120 countries which have supported the reform efforts of the UN Secretary General. The Minister is scheduled to have a series of meetings today, including that with Tunisian Foreign Minister Khemaies Jhinaoui, Bhutanese Prime Minister Tshering Tobgay, Danish Foreign Minister Anders Samuelsen, Latvian Foreign Minister Edgars Rinkevics and her Bolivian counterpart Fernando Huanacuni Mamani. Akbaruddin in an interaction with Indian reporters ruled out a bilateral meeting between Swaraj and her Pakistani counterpart Khawaja Asif. However, the two leaders are likely to see each other during several multilateral meetings, including that of SAARC and the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO). Swaraj is scheduled to leave for India, a day after her address to the UN General Assembly.