Kuwait Times

Indian app highlights backlash against Chinese business

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NEW DELHI: India’s top trending free app on Google’s mobile app store, with more than 5 million downloads since late May, is called “Remove China Apps” and does exactly what it says on the label. Its popularity comes amid calls for a boycott of Chinese mobile apps in India as a Himalayan border dispute fuels a backlash against products from China. Popular Indian yoga guru Baba Ramdev posted a video on Twitter on Sunday showing the step-by-step deletion of several Chinese apps, a move he described as a “national service”.

Chinese companies have faced occasional opposition for years in India, where some supporters of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s party advocate self reliance. Remove China Apps, whose logo contains a dragon’s head with two brooms, scans a user’s phone for apps such as ByteDance’s TikTok and Alibaba’s UC Browser. Once deleted, a message pops up saying, “You are awesome, no China app found.” OneTouch

AppLabs, which has developed the app to remove Chinese ones, did not respond to a request for comment. The company, based in the western Indian city of Jaipur, describes the app as its first initiative toward a “self reliant India”.

ByteDance and Alibaba did not respond to Reuters requests for comment on the app. The Chinese Embassy in New Delhi did not immediatel­y respond. The protest against Chinese apps comes after India in April said stricter screening rules will apply to foreign direct investment­s from China, worrying investors there. China has said the policy is discrimina­tory. “Previous boycott calls have focused on Chinese goods, whereas this one especially targets Chinese apps, which could impact Chinese technology companies who have seen India as a crucial market,” said Tanvi Madan, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institutio­n who closely tracks Indo-China relations. The stakes are high for firms like ByteDance, which plans to invest $1 billion in India and has recently ramped up hiring.

India, which has a population of 1.3 billion, is the biggest driver of installati­ons of ByteDance’s TikTok, which Bollywood actor Milind Soman said last week on Twitter that he was no longer using. Nupur Sharma, a spokeswoma­n for Modi’s party, said it was “great to see concerned citizens setting an example”. “We ought to hit them where it hurts most,” Sharma said on Twitter, using the hashtag, #BoycottChi­neseProduc­ts. A senior executive working for a China-based company in India, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said Chinese firms were contributi­ng to the Indian economy, especially the manufactur­ing sector. He predicted the protests will be short-lived: “It hurts but (the boycott calls) are going to fade.”

 ?? — AFP ?? BEIJING: Workers clean the windows on the exterior of a highrise building in Beijing yesterday.
— AFP BEIJING: Workers clean the windows on the exterior of a highrise building in Beijing yesterday.

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