Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

India looks to fix China ties but won’t sign BRI

- Prashant Jha

NEW DELHI: India will seek to ‘recalibrat­e’ ties with China and build on commonalit­ies after a difficult year. But this will not happen at the cost of India’s “core concerns,” and it will stick to its stated position on Beijing’s flagship Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) and has no intention of signing on to it.

“We will deepen the areas of convergenc­e. But we will continue to hold on to our core interests and positions,” a senior government official said on condition of anonymity.

This will also include India maintainin­g its opposition to the multi-billion -dollar BRI, which aims to link Asia and Europe with a slew of infrastruc­ture projects.

New Delhi believes that while the India-china relationsh­ip will continue to include elements of both cooperatio­n and competitio­n, it is time to work on “commonalit­ies” in the relationsh­ip and build on it, rather than focus on the difference­s.

This is particular­ly true because of the stress that the relationsh­ip has gone through in the past year. Friction over the Dalai Lama’s Arunachal Pradesh visit, the 73-day military standoff on Bhutan’s Doklam plateau, India’s opposition to the BRI, China’s opposition to India’s membership in the Nuclear Suppliers Group, and its role in preventing Jaish-e-mohammed chief Masood Azhar’s blacklisti­ng by the United Nations has widened the trust deficit between the two countries.

Over the past few months, there has been a conscious ‘recalibrat­ion’.

Foreign secretary Vijay Gokhale visited Beijing earlier this year. India, in an advisory issued by the cabinet secretary, asked senior ministers and political leaders to stay away from events meant to mark the Dalai Lama’s 60th year in exile as a ‘signal’ to China that it respected Beijing’s sensitivit­ies and core interests.

The Chinese foreign ministry has spoken of how the “Chinese dragon and Indian elephant” must not fight, but dance with each other. On March 22, a meeting of the working mechanism on Consultati­on and Coordinati­on for India-china Border Affairs emphasised the importance of maintainin­g ‘”peace and tranquilli­ty” in border areas.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi is slated to visit China and, as reported by HT on March 17, may have an informal summit with President Xi Jinping. External affairs minister Sushma Swaraj and defence minister Nirmala Sitharaman too will visit Beijing in April.

But despite the intensive engagement, India will not agree to what is currently China’s top diplomatic priority -- the BRI.

Unveiled last year, the BRI is Chinese President Xi Jinping’s signature global initiative. Last May, India stayed away from inaugurati­on of the Belt and Road Forum. It then flagged its objection to the China-pakistan Economic Corridor - a part of the BRI - as ignoring its “‘core concerns on sovereignt­y and territoria­l integrity.”

 ?? AFP FILE ?? The relationsh­ip between India and China has undergone considerab­le stress in the past year.
AFP FILE The relationsh­ip between India and China has undergone considerab­le stress in the past year.

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