Scholars urge Xi, Modi to chart path for ‘peaceful rise’
PLA QUOTES TAGORE ON LOVE FOR CHINA
WUHAN: The world has never witnessed the simultaneous rise of two huge neighbours and a key expectation from the informal summit between Prime Minister Narendra Modi and President Xi Jinping in Wuhan is that they will chart a roadmap to manage this ascent peacefully, Chinese scholars have said.
The summit — and the carefully planned informal backdrop to it — gives Modi and Xi an opportunity to inject a dose of mutual trust into relations and quell tensions that recently clouded the relationship.
The summit gives a chance to both leaders to put on the table how they and their countries perceive each other — as rivals or potential partners.
“The world has never witnessed the rise of two big powers as neighbours. How are you going to manage that peacefully? How can you manage the differences, engage in cooperation and create a new pattern of relations…the two leaders are determined to achieve that,” said Wang Dong, professor of International Studies at Peking University.
“Mutual perception is very important. The key is how to read each other’s perceptions and intentions. If one side treats the other as a rival, there will be problems,” said Li Li, South Asian scholar at the Institute for International Relations, Tsinghua University.
Over two days of interactions, Modi and Xi will have the opportunity to define how India and China look at each other, Li said.
China-india ties have been guided by their leaders and both countries need people at the helm who have the political will to take decisions, said another scholar.
“China-india ties are complicated, they need strong political will from the above (to keep ties on track), especially from strong leaders like PM Modi and President Xi,” said Lan Jianxue, associate research fellow of China Institute of International Studies. WUHAN: The People’s Liberation Army Thursday invoked Nobel laureate Rabindranath Tagore as it talked about the common development of the two countries.
“China and India are neighbours that can’t be moved. There are historical facts about ancient exchanges and mutual understanding. There is hope for common development,” PLA spokesman Wu Qian said. “When President Xi (Jinping) visited India, he told a story that more than 90 years ago, Indian poet Tagore visited China and was warmly welcomed.” Wu added: “As soon as he set foot on China’s land, Tagore said: ‘I don’t know what the reason is. To return to China is like returning to my hometown. My heart is here,” he quoted Tagore as saying.
Indian and Chinese troops were locked in a 73-day military standoff last year in the Doklam plateau at the trjunction with Bhutan. The faceoff was triggered by an attempt by Chinese troops to build a road there.
Lan, who was posted at the Chinese embassy in New Delhi, said bilateral ties had faced challenges recently. “After the Donglang (Doklam) standoff, both sides need to sit down and turn a new page in the relationship.”
The summit will send a clear message the two are willing to engage in a mature way despite festering differences, the scholars said. “In my understanding, the summit itself is a big outcome. It will definitely help them to understand each other better,” Li from Tsinghua University said.