Gulf Times

Age of expansioni­sm over, Modi tells troops

- Reuters

Prime Minister Narendra Modi yesterday flew into the northern border region where Indian and Chinese troops are locked in a standoff, and said the military stood ready to defend the country.

His comments prompted Beijing to call for restraint at the tense border area in the northern Himalayan region of Ladakh.

Modi, making his first trip to the Ladakh region since the Indian army lost 20 soldiers in a clash with Chinese soldiers last month, said his country’s commitment to peace should not be seen as a sign of weakness.

“Today India is becoming stronger, be it in naval might, air power, space power and the strength of our army. Modernisat­ion of weapons and upgradatio­n of infrastruc­ture has enhanced our defence capabiliti­es multifold,” he said in a speech to soldiers near Leh, the regional capital.

“India has always pursued the path of peace in the world but at the same time, those who are weak can never initiate steps for peace. Bravery and courage is a prerequisi­te for peace,” he added.

Modi also referred to expansioni­sm in his speech to soldiers, saying it caused problems.

“(The) prime minister said that the time for expansioni­sm is over. This is the era of developmen­t,” the government quoted Modi as saying, in a press release. “He recalled that it is this mindset of expansioni­sm that did great harm.”

India says Chinese troops have intruded across the Line of Actual Control, or the ceasefire line separating the two armies in the high altitude Ladakh region, and the clash on June 15 occurred because Chinese troops sought to erect defences on India’s side of the de facto border.

China says the whole of the Galwan valley where the clash occurred is its territory and that it was frontline Indian troops that had breached the border, which is not demarcated.

China’s foreign ministry said yesterday the two countries were holding talks to reduce tensions.

Spokesman Zhao Lijian, responding to a question about Modi’s visit to the border region, said both sides were in communicat­ions through diplomatic and military channels to ease the situation.

“In these circumstan­ces, neither side should take actions that might complicate the border situation,” he said at a daily news briefing in Beijing.

The most serious crisis on the India-China border in years has erupted while Beijing is embroiled in disputes over the South China Sea, Taiwan and its tightening grip over Hong Kong, which have all fanned fears of an expansioni­st policy.

In a separate developmen­t, the power ministry stipulated that Indian companies will need government permission to import power supply equipment and components from China, amid rising military tensions between the two countries.

 ??  ?? Prime Minister Narendra Modi visits an army hospital in Ladakh.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi visits an army hospital in Ladakh.

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