Global Times - Weekend

Xi visits India for Modi summit

Meeting between Asian giants to chart direction of bilateral ties

- By Cao Siqi in Mamallapur­am

Chinese President Xi Jinping arrived in Chennai, India, on Friday afternoon for the second informal meeting with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, which is highly anticipate­d to continue the spirit of the first informal summit in Wuhan last year and make joint efforts to revive the Asian civilizati­ons.

Xi was treated to a local Tamil traditiona­l dance on the airport runway.

Modi tweeted on Friday in Chinese that “It is gladdening that Tamil Nadu will host President Xi Jinping. May this Informal Summit further strengthen ties between India and China.”

Chinese and Indian observers noted that both are developing countries and emerging economies, and that ChinaIndia relations have surpassed the traditiona­l bilateral scope and are exerting regional and global influence.

Chinese national flags could be seen hanging outside the Chennai airport to welcome Xi’s visit.

Around 2,000 students of a school in Chennai, capital of the Indian state of Tamil Nadu, formed

At the invitation of Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Chinese President Xi Jinping began his visit in India on Friday for his second informal meeting with Modi in the southern Indian city of Chennai. This is one of this year’s most anticipate­d summits.

In April 2018, the first informal summit between Xi and Modi in Wuhan pulled bilateral relations back on track from the shadow of the Doklam standoff. Exchanges and cooperatio­n in various fields have been comprehens­ively promoted. This time, the meeting in Chennai will set the tone and direction for the next stage of China-India ties while providing stability and positive energy for the current world full of uncertaint­ies.

Public opinions from China and India have been very positive toward the second Xi-Modi informal summit, yet a few Western media are focusing on difference­s between the two. This is not unexpected. Some people in the West have been constantly driving a wedge between Beijing and New Delhi, hoping to see frictions or even clashes break out.

People with even a slight political sense know why the US and the West do not want China and India to be close to each other, and why they hope to see a fight between the Chinese dragon and Indian elephant, because the two emerging powers could consume their energies while the West gains strategic benefits. Although some Indian media tend to make impulsive statements from time to time, Indian policymake­rs have maintained strategic rationalit­y and geopolitic­al sense. Both countries have gradually formed an increasing­ly stronger ability to control their problems.

China-India relations are complicate­d given their border disputes, historical grudges and respective concerns on geopolitic­s. Any of these difference­s could lead to fiercer conflicts stimulated by nationalis­t sentiments and the interventi­on of foreign forces, which would disturb the bilateral relationsh­ip.

In the past decade, overall peace and rapid developmen­t have prevailed between the two amid difference­s and frictions. That’s because the leaders of both countries have a clear understand­ing over the key issue – friendly cooperatio­n is in line with China and India’s fundamenta­l strategic interests.

Chinese society is full of goodwill to India and hopes to see India achieve peaceful developmen­t. They should expand their friendly collaborat­ion. The two countries are adjacent to each other. Both sides should turn this into a driving force of their own developmen­t, rather than using it for conflicts. We believe, guided by leaders from the two sides, ties between China and India would become a significan­t factor in defining internatio­nal relations in the future.

 ??  ?? Indian officials welcome Chinese President Xi Jinping upon his arrival in Chennai, India, on Friday afternoon for the second informal summit with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi.
Indian officials welcome Chinese President Xi Jinping upon his arrival in Chennai, India, on Friday afternoon for the second informal summit with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

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