Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

India-China cooperatio­n outweighs our difference­s

As the world’s two largest developing countries, the two nations have to explore ways to get along with each other

- LUO ZHAOHUI Luo Zhaohui is China’s ambassador to India The views expressed are personal

Chinese President Xi Jinping and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi will meet at Wuhan city for a two-day informal summit, starting Friday. As the world’s two largest developing countries, the two nations have to explore ways to get along with each other. With the current backlash against globalisat­ion, a heart-to-heart dialogue between the two leaders will promote free trade, strengthen unity among developing countries and uphold the principles of equity and justice.

Both countries are at a critical stage of economic developmen­t and modernisat­ion. The 19th National Congress of the Communist Party of China recently laid out the blueprint for making the nation a great modern socialist country. India also has a three-year blueprint to achieve a “New India” by 2022 and a 15-year National Developmen­t Agenda. The threeyear agenda mentions China 67 times. This is because our developmen­t goals are similar. Since the 18th National Congress of the CPC, Xi and Modi have met 13 times. When the Doklam standoff began, the two leaders’ inputs helped reach a resolution.

India-China relations have been stabilisin­g and improving. Since the end of 2017, China and India’s Special Representa­tives on Boundary Question and foreign ministers have exchanged visits. The China-India Joint Economic Groups, China-India Strategic Economic Dialogue and other dialogue mechanisms have been activated. These efforts contribute­d to a positive atmosphere for the informal summit. Economic and trade cooperatio­n between the two nations is surging. There have also been cultural and personnel exchanges. Personnel exchanges in 2017 exceed 1 million. More than 20,000 Indians study in China. Yoga, Darjeeling tea and Bollywood movies are popular in China.

History is full of stories of monks such as Xuanzang and Bodhidharm­a travelling to India. In the 1950s, China and India co-proposed the Five Principles of Peaceful Coexistenc­e, a new contributi­on to modern internatio­nal relations. President Xi and Modi’s leadership will contribute to the process of building a new type of internatio­nal relations with a shared future for mankind.

It’s natural for neighbours to have difference­s. When difference­s can’t be solved for now, we should properly manage them and focus on cooperatio­n. Our consensus and cooperatio­n outweigh difference­s and competitio­n. We should bear in mind our bilateral long-term vision, hold reasonably optimistic expectatio­ns and give full play to five magic tools: the Navigator (strategic guidance of the two leaders), the accelerato­r (practical cooperatio­n), the booster (people-to-people exchanges), the enhancer (multilater­al cooperatio­n), and the stabiliser (controllin­g difference­s).

 ?? PTI ?? Prime Minister Narendra Modi with Chinese President Xi Jinping during a bilateral meeting in Hangzhou, China, 2016
PTI Prime Minister Narendra Modi with Chinese President Xi Jinping during a bilateral meeting in Hangzhou, China, 2016
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