The Free Press Journal

One-on-one meet between Modi and Xi at BRICS summit could be game changer

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Prime Minister Narendra Modi will arrive in Xiamen on Sunday for the BRICS Summit, where he is likely to meet Chinese President Xi Jinping, days after the two countries ended their 73-day standoff in the Dokalam area.

The three-day summit in Xiamen, a southeaste­rn Chinese city in Fujian province, will begin on Sunday even as authoritie­s declared a high alert with Typhoon Mawar expected to hit the coastal region.

The summit will be the first gathering when the leaders of Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa will meet after New Delhi and Beijing decided on “expeditiou­s disengagem­ent” of their border troops in the disputed Dokalam area on August 28.

It is likely to provide Modi and Xi their first face-toface opportunit­y to discuss the standoff, which had started on June 16 after the Chinese military tried to build a road India feared would allow Beijing to cut off its access to north eastern states.

India and China have not ruled out a Modi-Xi meeting during the summit. India's External Affairs Ministry has said it was a common practice to arrange bilateral meetings on the margins of such multilater­als, while the Chinese foreign ministry has said it will make arrangemen­ts “if time allows”.

Ahead of the summit, China has also said BRICS was not an appropriat­e forum for India to raise the counter-terrorism record of Pakistan, its “all-weather” ally.

While external affairs ministry spokesman Raveesh Kumar yesterday refused to “pre-empt” as to what Modi will speak during his interventi­on at the summit on Monday, sources said India is expected to flag concerns over terrorism strongly.

At the BRICS Summit hosted by India last year, Modi had described Pakistan as a “mothership” of terrorism worldwide and sought decisive global action against terror outfits.

The summit was also expected to discuss the course of the BRICS grouping of emerging economies for the next 10 years asit has completed its first decade in existence.

The Xiamen city, which is geographic­ally close to Taiwan and separated by a narrow strip of Taiwan Straits, has been decked up for the high-profile summit.

China has projected high expectatio­ns from the Xiamen summit, which will be attended by Russian President Vladimir Putin, South Africa's Jacob Zuma and Brazil's Michel Temer.

The BRICS nations are key players in the world economy and in global governance. Together, the five accounted for 23 per cent of the 2016 global economy, almost double their share in 2006. They contribute­d more than half of world economic growth in the past 10 years, becoming the strongest engines of the global economy.

In a commentary, China's state-run Xinhua news agency said these BRICS countries have shown no fear of the lacklustre world economy but demonstrat­ed to the world what they can achieve more by staying united.

China has also invited leaders from five other emerging markets – Egypt, Guinea, Mexico, Tajikistan and Thailand – to the summit under its “BRICS Plus” concept.

Chinese foreign minister Wang Yi said the five countries mentioned were not permanent invitees but they will participat­e only this year. He compared their presence to India's invitation to BIMSTEC (Bay of Bengal Initiative for MultiSecto­ral Technical and Economic) leaders for last year's Goa summit.

 ??  ?? It should be business as usual for Prime Minister Narendra Modi in China.
It should be business as usual for Prime Minister Narendra Modi in China.

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