The Asian Age

Go public to refute China over OBOR

-

India acted in an appropriat­ely correct manner in boycotting the twoday Belt Road Forum conference in Beijing, attended by 29 nations, including the United States and Russia, that began on Sunday. China’s awkwardly-named “One Belt One Road” policy for making deep inroads in the economic and political sphere in Africa, large swathes of Asia and Europe, is its most ambitious foreign policy initiative since the founding of the People’s Republic in 1949.

The policy is helmed personally by President Xi Jinping, who in Chinese iconograph­y has officially passed into the realm of the greats, alongside Mao Zedong and Deng Xiaoping. As such, and given the scale and scope of OBOR — Beijing has pledged $100 billion to it over an undefined timespan — it was expected China would take on board the sovereignt­y and key political concerns of its neighbours in conceiving and executing the But this was not the case.

The China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), the high-profile segment of OBOR from Kashgar in China’s Xinjiang province to Gwadar port in Balochista­n, passes through Pakistan-occuped Kashmir, which is Indian territory captured by Pakistan in 1947. India’s objections relating to sovereignt­y concerns has simply been glossed over by China.

There is poetic justice in the fact that the day the Beijing conference opened, public protests erupted in PoK’s Gilgit-Baltistan region. Demonstrat­ors called the highway being built under CPEC the “road to ghulami” (road to slavery). They also said China entered the region “illegally” with Pakistan’s help.

Also, in funding the Daimer-Bhasha dam, the World Bank, Asian Developmen­t Bank and Aga Khan Foundation had insisted a noobjectio­n certificat­e be got from India, but China has had no such compunctio­ns and its National Energy Administra­tion has come forward with the financing. It is a pity that the government has not brought the above facts to the public domain. New Delhi should have campaigned on these and other aspects that have a bearing on sovereignt­y. But all it did was to keep on hold until the last minute its decision on whether to participat­e in the OBOR conference or not.

It would have been appropriat­e for the government to explain to the public and all concerned that India’s reservatio­ns to OBOR aren’t linked to matters connected with transporta­tion and infrastruc­ture connectivi­ty in the region and beyond, but to sensitive political and sovereignt­y concerns.

It is for India to ponder how its claim on PoK will fare once the Chinese are ensconced in PoK with their road, dams and power projects, as well as military forces that would necessaril­y be present to guard the newly-created assets. The implicatio­ns of this close cooperatio­n between China and Pakistan against Indian interests are, however, yet to be properly understood in the country.

The implicatio­ns of this close cooperatio­n between China and Pakistan against Indian interests are, however, yet to be properly understood in the country.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India