Global Times

Bumpy ties

India’s anti-China groups imperial bilateral ties

- BY GT staff reporters

Since skirmishes broke out on the China-India border in May, Indian society is flooded with rising anti-China sentiment with celebritie­s, media and the public openly calling for boycott of Chinese products, “taking a revenge” or “making China pay” for deaths in the clashes, observers found. Amid the clashes at Galvan Valley, Indians’ anti-China sentiment rose on social media with many posts calling for an “all-round war.”

“If I have gun I [will] kill at least 100 Chinese soldiers before I die,” read one post on Twitter. Another net user wrote “Will destroy your all China. With Atom and Hydrogen bomb.”

Some posts recalled the two countries’ 1962 war and claimed a new war with China would be revenge. Indian anti-China sentiment has expanded amid clashes on the ChinaIndia­n border that reportedly caused casualties for both sides. According to a report released by Pew Research Center in December 2019, only 23 percent of people in India had a favorable opinion of China, ranking the second least after Japan among the 34 countries and regions surveyed.

The report showed Indians are uncomforta­ble with the rise of China especially in economic terms. As many as 61 percent of Indian respondent­s said China’s growing economy is bad for their country, while only 20 percent said it is good. Similarly, 54 percent of them viewed Chinese investment as a bad thing as it “gives China too much influence” in India.

Engineer and educator Sonam Wangchuk, the inspiratio­n of a main character in the Bollywood blockbuste­r 3 Idiots, appealed to boycott made-inChina products on Twitter in late May, which has gained 18,700 retweets as of Wednesday.

In a video Wangchuk uploaded on YouTube, he listed a few Chinese mobile phone apps that are popular in Indian including TikTok, and called on Indian users to “uninstall Chinese apps (to) develop and support Indian apps.

This nationalis­t, anti-China sentiment was echoed by the viral “success” of an Indian app “Remove China Apps,” which had reached 5 million downloads within two weeks before being taken down from Google Play Store, reported Business Insider on June 3. Nearly 160,000 Indian users were said to have given it a five-star rating.

The hostility against China has ironically hur Indians themselves, as 1 85 nurses reportedly quit their jobs in hospitals in Kolkata for the “discrimina­tion and racism” they had faced amid the pandemic. In a video published on India-based news site Times Now on June 4, a nurse suggested they were mistaken as Chinese and were insulted by locals.

Xiao Jun, a Chinese observe who has lived in India for a few years, told the Global Times that anti-China forces in India can be normally divided into four types. The first are the “diehards” who see China as a hostile power, often deeply affected by the Sino-Indian war of 1962.

Xiao

said the second type is ultranatio­nalists, who have lobbied against any Chinese goods like Huawei’s technology. Those extreme nationalis­ts are not only against China but any country they regard as hurting their national pride.

The third group is anti-China politician­s, who use “anti-China sentiment” as a stepping stone for their career pathway, said Xiao. They go against China for their own interests and exploit public sentiment amid changing global relations.

The fourth group is India’s intellectu­als and the middle class who are sometimes obsessed and even have blind obedience to Western values. They tend to believe the demonized characteri­zations of

China described in some Western media, said Xiao. This fourth group criticizes China systematic­ally against its political institutio­ns and social rules, but without hostile remarks, he added.

China and India have lacked strategic mutual trust, as many observed, after the two main powers suffered from a series of conflicts such as the war in 1962, India’s 1998 nuclear test, India’s bid to join the Nuclear Suppliers Group in 2018, India’s rejected applicatio­n to be a permanent member of the UN Security Council, and perhaps most significan­tly, the China-India border Doklam standoff in 2017.

Some deeply rooted incompatib­le issues also fuel in the unstable bilateral relationsh­ips such as India’s support to separatist Dalai Lama, their concern about China’s friendly relationsh­ip with Pakistan, and India’s trade deficit with China.

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 ?? Photo: AFP ?? Indian workers tie Indian and Chinese national flags onto poles in front of The Indian Secretaria­t in New Delhi.
Photo: AFP Indian workers tie Indian and Chinese national flags onto poles in front of The Indian Secretaria­t in New Delhi.

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