Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

‘Don’t drag China into Kashmir issue’

- Sutirtho Patranobis spatranobi­s@hindustant­imes.com

: The India-Pakistan row over Kashmir shouldn’t hold up Chinese projects in the region as the territoria­l issue doesn’t relate to China, according to a leading Chinese expert on world affairs who believes New Delhi and Islamabad should resolve the problem instead of dragging Beijing into it.

China needs to have access to ports such as Gwadar in Pakistan under the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) and the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) to move its huge shipments of cargo to other parts of the world, said Wang Zhan, a deputy to the National People’s Congress (NPC), China’s Parliament, and president of the Shanghai Academy of Social Sciences.

“I know India has lot of disagreeme­nts with the CPEC to Gwadar port. But if you are Chinese, considerin­g (the situation in) Malacca Strait and the South China Sea, you would be looking for alternativ­e passageway­s. We have so much cargo, we surely need the ports. We have to pass by the Indian Ocean to reach Europe,” he said.

Speaking exclusivel­y to Hindustan Times on the sidelines of the just-concluded NPC session, Wang said: “I know India and Pakistan have a dispute over (Kashmir.)

“If we go through the Kashmir area, which belongs to India, its a problem of sovereignt­y (for India) but now Pakistan has the right of administra­tion (over PoK). So, it’s a problem between India and Pakistan and doesn’t relate to China.”

Wang, who is also managing director of the China Centre for Internatio­nal Economic Exchanges, said China wasn’t the first country to bring up the Silk Road plan to connect regions and continents.

“Japan brought up the Silk Road in 1990s, an American Harvard professor brought it up in 2005, and Hillary Clinton brought it up in 2011. They all brought up the Silk Road concept earlier than China,” he said, adding some proposals were north to south and China’s east to west.

“If all the projects in these plans could be realised, the countries touched in the plans would definitely develop, and the economic developmen­t would decrease the element of war and chaos,” he added.

Wang said China’s increasing investment­s in infrastruc­ture, such as ports, in South Asian countries such as Sri Lanka is purely for economic reasons.

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