Millennium Post

Meaningful Indo-china meetings started after Rajiv Gandhi’s visit: Congress

- OUR CORRESPOND­ENT

NEW DELHI: As Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Chinese President Xi Jinping concluded their informal meeting at Mamallapur­am on Saturday, the Congress said that India's meaningful engagement with China started with former Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi's visit to the neighbouri­ng country in 1988 and the Manmohan Singh led-upa the government took it forward to the level of mature understand­ing.

Replying to a question on Aksai Chin, Congress spokespers­on Anand Sharma said that the Congress Working Committee (CWC) had passed a resolution saying the part of Kashmir, which was illegally ceded to China by Pakistan, should be returned to India.

He said that the party had taken a note of the summit that took place between India and China. The two countries were not only neighbours, but two major economies and the two most populated nations in the world and their partnershi­p was multi-faceted, despite the difficulti­es and unresolved issues they had, Sharma said, replying to questions about the summit.

“India has remained meaningful­ly engaged with China and it started with (former) Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi's visit in 1988 and his dialogue with then Chinese supreme leader and during the 10 years of the UPA government, this was taken forward and the relationsh­ip was brought to a level of mature understand­ing,” the Congress spokespers­on said.

The senior Congress leader reiterated that the party was firm on its stand that Jammu and Kashmir was an integral part of India and that the Kashmir problem was entirely our internal matter.

“I did not think that Modi would have discussed it with Jinping. We are against any third party meddling in the Jammu and Kashmir issue,” Sharma said.

About the Centre's decision to remove the restrictio­ns on mobile communicat­ion in Kashmir from Monday, he said the Congress always felt that the people in the Valley should enjoy all the rights and freedom guaranteed in the Constituti­on.

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