The Asian Age

Ex-diplomat cautions China over Azhar issue

- YOSHITA SINGH

India’s former foreign secretary S. Jaishankar has said China has to think what signal it is sending to the world by putting a technical hold in the UN on a proposal to list Pakistan-based terror group JeM’s chief Masood Azhar as a global terrorist.

China last week blocked for the fourth consecutiv­e time a resolution at the UN Security Council Committee on designatin­g Azhar as a global terrorist.

The proposal under the 1267 Al Qaeda Sanctions Committee of the UN Security Council was moved by France, the UK and the US on February 27, days after a suicide bomber of the JeM killed 44 CRPF soldiers in Jammu and Kashmir’s Pulwama, leading to a flare-up in tensions between India and Pakistan.

Mr Jaishankar, president of Global Corporate Affairs at Tata Group and India’s former ambassador to China and the US, said: “this is an issue that the Chinese have to think through for themselves, you know, what is the signal they are sending”.

The statement of Jaishankar, also India’s former foreign secretary, came during a session at Asia Society here this week while responding to a question on China again blocking the proposal to ban Azhar.

Mr Jaishankar was participat­ing in a discussion ‘New Roadmaps for Asia’ focusing on the Free and Open Indo-Pacific and the Quadrilate­ral Security Dialogue at the city-based cultural organisati­on along with Japan’s former Vice Minister for Foreign Affairs and member of the board at Mitsubishi Corporatio­n Akitaka Saiki.

Asked how India views China’s ambitious Belt and Road Initiative, Mr Jaishankar said India’s position on the project has been made very clear.

“We have an overall position on connectivi­ty, which is autonomous of the Belt and Road. It would apply to a Japanese initiative or an American initiative,” he said.

India has some specific concerns about the Chinese initiative, he said.

“The first issue for us is that any connectivi­ty initiative should be respectful of sovereignt­y. The reason I stress is that one of the corridors, the so-called China-Pakistan Economic Corridor, passes through the state of Jammu and Kashmir. And that is the land which is illegally held by Pakistan and part of it has been illegally ceded to China,” he said.

Mr Jaishankar said that it has to be borne in mind “that you are talking of a certain amount of real estate for which actually Pakistan is not legally claiming ownership nor is China legally claiming ownership but India is the only sovereign legal claimant of that land. The fact that the Indian sovereignt­y was disregarde­d is obviously something which is difficult for India to overlook,” he said.

Mr Jaishankar noted that there is also a larger issue on connectivi­ty, including whether it is consultati­ve.

“Are we better served by a consultati­ve process or by a unilateral process where one player is driving connectivi­ty for their particular interest,” he asked.

He said that the other issue is whether the initiative is commercial­ly viable.

This is an issue that the Chinese have to think through for themselves, you know, what is the signal they are sending — S. Jaishankar, Ex-foreign secy

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