NEW DELHI: Prime Minister Narendra Modi has got a second invitation in as many weeks to attend an international sporting event, this time from his British counterpart David Cameron Cameron has invited Modi for the Glasgow Commonwealth Games. The British government is looking forward to mix some business with sports if the Indian Prime Minister accepts the invitation.Indian officials said the government has yet to make a decision. The Games starts on July 23 and ends August 3, a time when the new government will be in the midst of its first budget session in Parliament.Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff has invited Modi to watch the World Cup Football final on July 13 at Rio de Janeiro. The Prime Minister is scheduled to visit Brazil for a BRICS summit that follows the World Cup. He has yet to announce any decision on Rousseff’s invitation.Sources in the British government said their country could treat a visit by Modi as an official one because that would give Cameron an opportunity to engage with the new Prime Minister.Cameron was the first world leader to greet Modi on May 16 when the results of the Lok Sabha elections became clear. While there have been several visits of senior leaders to the UK, an Indian PM has not been to London in recent years.Cameron has made three trips to India since 2010. The UK was one of the first Western nations to resume interactions with Modi, ending their boycott of him over the 2002 riots in Gujarat where he was the chief minister. UK High Commissioner to India James Bevan met Modi in 2012 in Gandhinagar, and it was followed by Britain’s Foreign Office Minister Hugo Swire meeting him in March 2013. Swire, who called the meeting “a logical next step” in Britain’s relations with Gujarat, was the first minister from a European country to meet Modi after the riots.