Millennium Post

Learn lessons from China-trump spat: Chinese media tells India

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BEIJING: China’s official media on Thursday warned India against using the Dalai Lama “card”, saying New Delhi should stop behaving like a “spoilt kid” and learn lessons from how China handled Donald Trump after the US President-elect challenged ‘One-china’ policy.

“Sometimes, India behaves like a spoilt kid, carried away by the lofty crown of being ‘the biggest democracy in the world.’ India has the potential to be a great nation, but the country’s vision is shortsight­ed,” an article in the state-run Global Times said.

It said India “should draw some lessons from the recent interactio­ns between Beijing and Trump over Taiwan.”

“After putting out feelers to test China’s determinat­ion to protect its essential interests, Trump has met China’s restrained but pertinent countermea­sures, and must have understood that China’s bottom line - sovereign integrity and national unity - is untouchabl­e,” the paper said.

While the article did not elaborate on counter measures, China besides protesting to Trump over his phone call to the Taiwanese President and his comments questionin­g One-china policy, also seized an “unmanned underwater vehicle” in the disputed South China Sea, the first such incident in the area.

“Even the US would have to think twice before it messes with China on such sensitive problems, so what makes India so confident that it could manage?,” the article sounding strident in it tone and tenor said, referring to India going to Mongolia’s assistance by granting USD one billion aid after Beijing imposed a blockade in retaliatio­n to Ulaanbaata­r hosting Dalai Lama last month despite China protests.

The Mongolian Ambassador to India had sought New Delhi’s help to overcome China’s counter measures. However, the Mongolian government has given in and pledged that it will never invite Dalai Lama again.

Mongolian Foreign Minister Tsend Munkh-orgil said Tuesday that Mongolia will not allow the Dalai Lama to visit the country, even in the name of religion, “thus settling a one-month standoff between Mongolia and China”, it said. “But a long lingering issue behind it all is how India should handle its relationsh­ip with the Dalai Lama,” it said, referring to the Tibetan leader’s presence at the opening session of Laureates and Leaders for Children Summit at President house presided over by President Pranab Mukherjee.

China also objected to that saying India has went ahead with the invitation to Dalai Lama despite China s protests. External Affairs spokesman Vikas Swarup responded saying that “India’s position is consistent. His Holiness the Dalai Lama is a respected spiritual leader. It was a non political event which he attended.”

However, the article said “New Delhi has long held the Dalai Lama issue as leverage that it can use against China. President Mukherjee met with the Tibetan separatist in exile in India this month, probably as moral support to Mongolia, which mired itself in diplomatic trouble after receiving the Dalai Lama in November.”

China earlier objected over India granting permission to the Dalai Lama and another Tibetan spiritual leader in exile Gyalwang Karmapa Ogyen Trinley Dorje to Arunachal Pradesh.

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