Global Times

India-Pakistan ties not to be disrupted

- By Hu Weijia The author is a reporter with the Global Times. bizopinion@ globaltime­s.com.cn

India and Pakistan need to avoid engaging in a trade war that will deal a blow to their own economies as well as that of China.

Tensions between India and Pakistan skyrockete­d after Pakistan was reported to be considerin­g a ban on the imports of some Indian products, as a protest against India’s earlier move to withdraw most favored nation status given to Pakistan.

Last week, a suicide attack claimed by the Pakistan-based Islamist militant group Jaishe-Mohammad killed at least 40 Indian paramilita­ry troopers in the Pulwama district, resulting in India’s economic attacks and Pakistan’s reported tit-for-tat moves.

The suicide attack by a Pakistan-based terrorist outfit cannot be a reason for New Delhi to punish ordinary Pakistani people with economic measures. A possible decision to escalate tensions by carrying out countermea­sures against India is also inadvisabl­e.

What can comfort the dead is cross-border cooperatio­n in countering terrorism. A trade war can do nothing but complicate the situation.

The Indian and Pakistan economies will soon feel the pain of a trade war if the two countries further escalate economic tensions. Pakistan mainly imports cotton, chemicals and iron from India – materials that are vital for industry – while India imports fruit, cement and leather from Pakistan. Although their total trade is small, bilateral economic ties are more significan­t than some people realize.

With a strategic location along a key internatio­nal trade route, India and Pakistan have some inherent advantages to make themselves a regional logistics hub. But if the two countries isolated themselves from one another, their strategic significan­ce to economies in the region, China included, will be reduced.

Current economic interactio­n between India and Pakistan is a hard-own achievemen­t that should not be interrupte­d by a terror strike. Terrorists would be pleased to see that a trade war adds to the instabilit­y factors affecting South Asia. Should New Delhi and Islamabad fall into the trap of terrorists? The answer is no.

China is an onlooker of the ongoing India-Pakistan conflict, and it regrets the two countries’ economic losses, which could have been avoided.

However, China is not just an onlooker but a participan­t in the South Asian economy. As an important economic partner of both India and Pakistan, China is willing to make efforts to promote India-Pakistan economic cooperatio­n.

Like China, the primary strategy of both India and Pakistan is to promote economic and social developmen­t. Economic cooperatio­n among the three countries still has great potential to generate growth, which will eventually help crack down on terrorism.

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