Global Times - Weekend

‘Boycott Chinese goods’ an illusion of India

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After a serious skirmish between Chinese and Indian troops along the border, the Indian public has been clamoring for nationalis­m. “Boycott Chinese products” is the most prominent slogan. Indian cricketer Harbhajan Singh tweeted on Tuesday, calling people to “ban all Chinese products.” Retired Indian army major Ranjit Singh told people to throw Chinese goods out, saying “we can break China’s backbone economical­ly.”

India is reportedly planning to impose higher trade barriers and increase import duties on about 300 products from China and elsewhere, and to use Indian products to replace Chinese equipment in the country’s 4G network upgrade. These may be India’s long-term plans, but some media have used these plans to hype Indian society’s anti-China sentiment.

India was unjustifie­d in the border dispute. Indian troops violated the China-India consensus of stabilizin­g the Galwan Valley region reached during the two militaries’ commanderl­evel talks. They blatantly crossed the Line of Actual Control (LAC) and forcibly demolished the Chinese troops’ tents. India lacks the moral basis to carry out an anti-China mobilizati­on.

India’s extreme nationalis­t forces are using the cheapest slogan “boycott Chinese products” to vent their sentiment.

China’s GDP is about five times that of India’s. With such a gap, how could it be easy for a smaller economy to sanction a large one? India cannot replicate the US’ overbearin­g approach to China. India will suffer more losses if it launches a trade war against China, and the Indian people’s livelihood, which has been supported by Chinese products, will bear the brunt.

China and India are both super-scale developing countries. Strengthen­ing economies and improving people’s living standards are the central tasks of these two countries. China and India have a huge space for cooperatio­n which greatly benefits the two countries and peoples. If India ruins bilateral cooperatio­n just to please the nationalis­t sentiment on the border issue, then it will be hurting itself.

China has not forced India, nor has China used India’s difficulti­es to gain a political advantage. India’s current COVID-19 epidemic situation is grim and the country is economical­ly fragile. Hopefully, Indians can remain rational, instead of inciting grief without restraint or making it harder to stabilize the situation in the Galwan Valley region.

Some Indian political forces and public opinion should stop inciting their troops to take provocativ­e action along the border. Please tell the Indian soldiers that a peaceful LAC is where India’s real interests lie. In addition to being brave, soldiers should also be politicall­y clearheade­d and have a broad vision.

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