The Sunday Guardian

INDIA WILL SkIP ChINA’S BELT AND ROAD FORum

‘India is not losing out on any opportunit­y by not being part of OBOR’.

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India has decided to boycott China’s “Belt and Road Conference 2017” scheduled in Beijing on Sunday, though seven SAARC countries that are linked to different corridors of China’s One Belt, One Road (OBOR) initiative will be sending delegation­s to the internatio­nal forum.

Responding to a query on the participat­ion of India in the OBOR/BRI Forum, Gopal Bagley, spokespers­on, Ministry of External Affairs, said, “We had received formal invitation to participat­e in the six separate forums that China is organising as part of the Belt and Road Forum being held in Beijing on 14-16 May.” Citing India’s stand on China’s BRI forum, Baglay said that while India supports all kind of connectivi­ty initiative­s, such initiative­s should be “based on universall­y recognised internatio­nal norms, good governance, rule of law, openness, transparen­cy and equality.”

Baglay added, “Guided by our principled position in the matter, we have been urging China to engage in a meaningful dialogue on its connectivi­ty initiative, ‘One Belt, One Road’ which was later renamed as ‘Belt and Road Initiative’. We are awaiting a positive response from the Chinese side.” On the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor, Baglay said, “The internatio­nal community is well aware of India’s position. No country can accept a project that ignores its core concerns on sovereignt­y and territoria­l integrity.”

Though a majority of SAARC countries will be sending high delegation­s to the Forum, Japan, India and the United States will be the most obvious absentees.

In a bid to woo India, China’s envoy to India had suggested renaming the corridor’s name to India-ChinaPakis­tan Corridor, but his statements were withdrawn later after Pakistan objected to the suggestion.

A.B. Mahapatra, director of Centre for Asian Strategic Studies, said, “India is not losing out on any opportunit­y by not being part of OBOR. The Belt and Road initiative is not global. It is China-driven and is meant to benefit China. The smaller countries that have become a part of the initiative will soon realise that the interest rates of China’s loans will make them mortgage their assets to China. Sri Lanka realised this at an early stage and scaled back on the Hambantota port deal. Cambodia is next in line, with their huge debt. They, too, will have to take strategic decisions to meet the payback on their debts to China. Pakistan will realise the same in next 3-4 years.”

Mahapatra added, “Most of the investment­s under the initiative in our neighbouri­ng countries were proposed by earlier premiers of China. Xi Jin Ping is rebranding them under the name of OBOR and using it to enhance his glory as a glo- balisation ace.”

Nonetheles­s, India’s neighbouri­ng countries have confirmed their weekend trip to China. Pakistan and Sri Lanka will be sending high level delegation­s to the conference with Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif’s confirmed attendance.

Nepal, too, has confirmed sending a high-level delegation which will consist of the deputy Prime Minister and Finance Minister Krishna Bahadur Mahara, along with two more ministers and other senior officials. Ahead of the conference, foreign secretary Shankar Das Bairagi and the Chinese ambassador to Nepal, Yu Hong, will sign the framework agreement on OBOR. The Nepalese delegation will sign a separate memorandum of understand­ing on OBOR. Beijing had sent a draft proposal on OBOR to Nepal late last year. After a month-long consultati­on, Nepal had sent back a revised version of the draft to China.

As far as Afghanista­n is concerned, news reports confirmed that a high-level Afghan delegation is due to attend the forum. Afghanista­n is an official partner of the initiative that expects to cash on a rare chance to develop its dry ports along the trade and transit routes and utilise its abundant natural resources.

A multibilli­on dollar contract for the developmen­t of the Mes Aynak copper mine in central Logar province was signed between China and Afghanista­n earlier this week. The mine is expected to produce about 11 million tonnes of copper in 25 years. This project will be funded entirely by China under a Build-Own-Operate-Transfer (BOOT) model.

In March, confirming Afghanista­n’s participat­ion in OBOR, Afghan finance minister Eklil Hakimi, who will be attending the forum, had said: “We have already aligned most of our domestic plans according to OBOR initiative”. In a first in India, Maharashtr­a will soon have a digitised integrated database of biometric and photograph­ic informatio­n of criminals— AMBIS (automated multimodal biometric identifica­tion system)—with the aim of increasing the conviction rate in the state. No other state in the country has such an advanced technology in its crime detection kitty at present. The machinery, procured from a leading French company, has already arrived in Maharashtr­a government’s headquarte­rs. It will go live all over Maharashtr­a in the next 42 weeks. Once functional and joined with the CCTNS (Crime and Criminal Tracking Network and Systems), it will help easy detection and identifica­tion of criminals. Leading crime detection agencies in USA and Europe, including the FBI, use this system, officials said. “The system integrates recognitio­n of iris, fingerprin­ts, palm-prints and face. It also integrates all these records with the criminal records. In fact, from grainy CCTV footage too, it can identify even those faces which have over 30 degrees of tilt. This system will be joined with CCTNS. So, the minute a police station uploads the fingerprin­ts or palmprints of an accused, the system will immediatel­y throw up searches showing the past record and criminal antecedent­s. This new system also has the capability to undertake complex mathematic­al algorithms to separate different fingerprin­ts,” a senior home department official told The Sunday Guardian.

The identified throughAMB­IS will have evidentiar­y value in the court of law, and will help improve the rate of conviction in the state. It is a leap towards the modernisa-

Under this scheme, the government will supply scanners to all the police stations in the state. There are 10 police commission­arates and 35 districts in Maharashtr­a.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Police personnel celebrate after a passing out ceremony at a police training academy in Agartala on Thursday.
REUTERS Police personnel celebrate after a passing out ceremony at a police training academy in Agartala on Thursday.

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