NEW DELHI: Japanese PM Shinzo Abe will host Prime Minister Narendra Modi for a private dinner at his holiday home in the picturesque Yamanashi prefecture, which is home to Mount Fuji, in a rare such reception to a foreign leader. Modi will be in Japan for a two-day visit from October 28-29 to hold the annual India-Japan summit Modi had hosted Abe in Ahmedabad for the summit last year during which the Japanese PM was also taken to Sabarmati Ashram of Mahatma Gandhi.A formal launch of negotiations for a military logistics pact is expected to be the highlight of the 13th India-Japan summit starting Sunday. Connectivity, infrastructure and security situation in the Indo-Pacific are expected to be other focus areas, the government said ahead of PM Narendra Modi’s visit to Japan.Briefing journalists about Modi’s visit, foreign secretary Vijay Gokhale said formal negotiations for Acquisition and Cross Servicing Agreement (ACSA) will begin during the summit. He, however, added that any announcement about signing of ACSA was unlikely on this occasion.India and Japan conduct joint military exercises regularly and, as Japanese ambassador to India Kenji Hiramatsu said recently, it is only natural for the two militaries to have a logistics-sharing agreement. The agreement would allow both navies to access each other’s naval facilities for refuelling and servicing.This will be the 5th India-Japan summit to be attended by Modi."Regional security will be another topic. We presume that given the interest Japan has in issues related to the Korean peninsula and DPRK, this matter will be discussed. We will certainly raise our concerns over terrorism and other trans-border crimes which are of importance to us," Gokhale said.Abe is currently visiting China, the first visit by a Japan PM to Beijing in 7 years, and will return just in time to receive Modi. Asked about this thawing of ties between Japan and China, Gokhale said it was not going to have any impact on India’s bilateral ties with Japan and that New Delhi welcomed good relations between the two countries.He said India is also hoping to have some kind of synergy or integration between Modi's ‘Ayushman Bharat’ scheme (on health insurance) and the Japanese programme which is called Asia Health and Well-being Initiative."How we dovetail this and how we leverage Japan's strength in certain areas including medical equipment, hospitals and others is something that the two leaders can explore," Gokhale said.Asked if land acquisition issues could mar the bullet train project with Japan, Gokhale said the government believed that the project will be completed by 2022.