Sun.Star Cebu

China accuses India of targeting Chinese imports after clash

- EDITOR: KATLENE O. CACHO / business@sunstar.com.ph

CHINA has accused India of improperly disrupting activities by Chinese companies in the midst of tensions over a bloody clash between forces along their disputed border.

China has not taken any retaliator­y measures in response to India’s actions and a return to normal is in the best interests of both countries, Commerce Ministry spokespers­on Gang Feng told reporters, according to the ministry’s website.

“It is hoped that the Indian side will immediatel­y correct the discrimina­tory practices against China and Chinese enterprise­s,” Gao said. New Delhi’s moves were in violation of World Trade Organizati­on rules and India’s commitment to global trade’s rules-making body, he said.

On Monday, June 29, India said it had banned 59 Chinese-owned apps, including TikTok, while Chinese companies are being blocked from participat­ing in highway projects and are banned from investing in micro, small and medium-sized enterprise­s.

Indian protesters have been calling for a boycott of Chinese goods since the June 15 confrontat­ion along the border.

India’s Prime Minister Narendra

Modi quit ubiquitous Chinese social media platform Weibo to send a strong message to Beijing on the border issue, economic front and at “personal level too,” the Press Trust of India news agency cited his party leader B.L. Santhosh as saying.

The latest tensions began in early May and culminated in hand-to-hand fighting in the Galwan Valley, a remote stretch of the 3,380-kilometer (2,100-mile) Line of Actual Control — the border establishe­d following a war between India and China in 1962 that resulted in an uneasy truce.

Twenty Indian troops were killed in the fighting. China is also believed to have suffered casualties but has released no informatio­n.

China has long wielded a large trade surplus with India, particular­ly in manufactur­ed goods.

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