Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

Cooperatio­n, rivalry to define India-china ties

- HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com ■

NEWDELHI: India-china relations in the coming years will be characteri­sed by a mix of cooperatio­n and competitio­n, especially in the Indian Ocean region, and the isolationi­st approach adopted by the US could see the two countries working together on multilater­al forums, experts said on Saturday.

However, countries in Asia, Africa and Europe continue to have concerns about the impact of the rise of China and its ambitious Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), while New Delhi is worried by Beijing’s stance on a number of key issues, including membership of the Nuclear Suppliers Group and listing of Pakistan-based terrorist Masood Azhar, as well as the growing trade deficit, they said.

Speaking at a session with the theme “India-china relations: Emerging trends” at the Hindustan Times Leadership Summit, they suggested that more communicat­ion and people-to-people exchanges could help narrow the trust deficit between India and China.

“There will be more room in India-china relations for both cooperatio­n and competitio­n, if not confrontat­ion,” said Jean-pierre Cabestan from Hong Kong Baptist University.

The two sides can cooperate in the fight against terror, Afghanista­n and at multilater­al forums while there will be competitio­n as well in the Indian Ocean region, he said.

Former foreign secretary S Jaishankar, currently president of global corporate affairs at Tata Sons, said China’s rise had been largely underestim­ated and its moves linked to BRI and South China Sea had caused “disruption­s and turbulence” round the world.

“Trade deficit is not just with the US, it is a problem of India,” Jaishankar said. He added the informal summit between Prime Minister Narendra Modi and President Xi Jinping at Wuhan was a “first attempt to change things”.

Huiyao Wang, president of the Beijingbas­ed Centre for China and Globalisat­ion, said both were confronted with similar problems, including urbanisati­on, environmen­tal issues, population and the unilateral­ism of the current US administra­tion. “Because of the trade issues with the US, India can be a big market for us and we can work together at multilater­al bodies such as WTO (World

 ??  ?? ■ (From left) Dr Wang of Centre For China and Globalizat­ion, Prof
■ (From left) Dr Wang of Centre For China and Globalizat­ion, Prof

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