India bats against protectionism
India on Tuesday said protectionism in all its forms should be rejected. External Affairs Minister Sush maS war aj’s remarks against protectionism and trade barriers were made during her address to the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation in Beijing. Her speech indicated that New Delhi shared China’ s concern over US protectionism.
India on Tuesday said protectionism in all its forms should be rejected. External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj’s remarks against protectionism and trade barriers were made during her address to the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) in Beijing.
Her speech indicated that New Delhi shared China’s concern over US protectionism, and also suggested mutual concerns on the issue are likely to feature prominently during Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Chinese President Xi Jinping’s ‘informal summit’ in Wuhan, the capital of the Hubei province in central China, later this week.
However, India did not endorse China’s controversial Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) at the SCO Foreign Ministers’ meeting. The rest of SCO’s members backed the pet project of President Xi.
“The foreign ministers of Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Pakistan, Russia, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan reiterated their support for the ‘Belt and Road Initiative’ proposed by China,” said a joint statement issued by SCO foreign ministers at the end of their one-day meeting on Tuesday.
India’s name was missing from the list of countries which endorsed the BRI in which the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) is a part. The BRI is expected to figure in the informal summit between Modi and Xi at Wuhan on April 27-28.
In her speech, Swaraj said: “We believe that economic globalisation should be more open, inclusive, equitable and balanced for mutual benefits. Protectionism in all its forms should be rejected and efforts should be made to discipline measures that constitute barriers to trade.”
Swaraj’s statement comes in the wake of Chinese, as well as Japanese, concerns at the US increasing trade barriers. Earlier this month, the Donald Trump administration had announced tariffs on aluminium and steel, besides about $50 billion worth of Chinese imports across 1,300 categories of products to counter China’s trade practices.
China has criticised the move. Its ministry of commerce has said Beijing is ready to take measures against US products with the same intensity and scale.
In New Delhi, official sources indicated that the PM was unlikely to raise contentious issues during his meeting with the Chinese President, including New Delhi’s concerns on its Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG) membership and China blocking the designation of Jaish-eMohammed chief Masood Azhar as a global terrorist by the UN.
They said the meeting will not have an “issue-based discussion but a strategic conversation between the two leaders to understand each other’s perspective on national and international matters”. Sources said the attempt wasn’t to “reset” India-China ties.
Briefing reporters in Beijing, Chinese Vice Foreign Minister Kong Xuanyou said, “Both sides have agreed not to sign an agreement or release any joint document but reach important consensus to resolve outstanding issues.”
Asked whether the Doklam issue and the boundary dispute will figure in the talks, Kong said Doklam happened because of lack of trust. He said the summit was being held as there was need for greater communication between the two neighbours.
The Chinese official media have said the Wuhan summit between Modi and Xi could be as significant as the one between late prime minister Rajiv Gandhi and then leader of China, Deng Xiaoping, in 1988.
Kong said the informal summit is the first of its kind and there was no precedent in each other’s country. He said both President Xi and Prime Minister Modi have strategic vision and historical responsibility.
“Both of them have been widely supported by their people. Both leaders have attached great importance to India-China relationship and have devoted a lot of energy to grow this relationship,” the Chinese vice foreign minister said. Modi and Xi will have in-depth exchange of views on the issues of overarching longterm and strategic importance in bilateral relations, he said.
Kong said the informal summit will also open up new prospects in India-China cooperation. Such an informal summit would not only benefit the two countries and peoples but will also deliver peace and development in the region and beyond, he said.