Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

China seeks to delink India ties and contentiou­s CPEC

- Sutirtho Patranobis spatranobi­s@htlive.com ■

CHINA’S FOREIGN MINISTRY HAS SAID THE PARTICIPAT­ION OF THE MILITARIES OF INDIA AND PAKISTAN AT A MULTILATER­AL EXERCISE ON THE SCO PLATFORM IN RUSSIA IS CRUCIAL TO PEACE IN THE REGION.

BEIJING: China on Monday sought to delink the contentiou­s economic corridor it’s building through Pakistan-occupied Kashmir from Sino-India ties, saying recent meetings between the leaders of the two sides have given the relationsh­ip “fresh impetus”.

“We are neighbours, we are partners. Historical­ly we were together and in the future, I never believe that anybody can separate India and China,” Zhang Jun, assistant minister of foreign affairs, said while describing ties between New Delhi and Beijing.

Zhang was among senior leaders who addressed the media on five years of the Belt and Road Initiative, President Xi Jinping’s ambitious connectivi­ty project.

India hasn’t joined the BRI as the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), one of its flagship projects, passes through PoK. The project became another irritant between the two countries since it was unveiled in 2013.

“China has repeatedly stated the CPEC is an economic initiative. Implementi­ng CPEC does not jeopardise China’s position on Kashmir,” he said.

Zhang referred to three meetings between Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Xi since April in the context of improved bilateral relations. On April 28, Modi and Xi met for an informal summit in the central Chinese city of Wuhan to formulate what is now known as the “Wuhan consensus”, an understand­ing to focus more on convergenc­es than difference­s. “Under the leadership (of Modi and Xi), China and India have exhibited a very good momentum of growth, a new phase of developmen­t (in ties),” he said.

“We can all recall, since April…since Wuhan, (the Shanghai Cooperatio­n Organisati­on summit in) Qingdao and (the BRICS Summit in) Johannesbu­rg, there have been three important meetings. They have reached important understand­ings,” he said, when asked about India’s sovereignt­y concerns over CPEC. “There is a fresh impetus in bilateral ties,” Zhang added. He contended India and China were natural partners in the ancient silk route “as well as the BRI”.

CPEC, however, is fast becoming a reality. Despite the current “fresh impetus” in China-India ties, Ning Jizhe, vice-chairman of the National Developmen­t Reform Commission, said at the same interactio­n that CPEC is progressin­g smoothly, with several projects already functional.

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