New Straits Times

BEIJING AND DELHI AGREE TO MAINTAIN BORDER PEACE

They vow to improve communicat­ion between militaries

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INDIA and China have agreed to improve communicat­ion between their militaries to maintain peace at the border, India’s foreign secretary said yesterday at the end of an ice-breaking trip to China by Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

Modi has spent the past 24 hours in the central Chinese city here for informal meetings with President Xi Jinping, months after a dispute over a stretch of their high-altitude Himalayan border rekindled fears of war between the Asian nations.

Indian Foreign Secretary Vijay Gokhale said after Modi and Xi wrapped up their talks that both leaders agreed their two countries had the maturity and wisdom to handle all their difference­s peacefully through talks.

“On the issue of the India-China boundary question, the two leaders endorsed the work of the special representa­tives in their efforts to find a fair, reasonable and mutually acceptable settlement.

“And the two leaders also underscore­d that it is important to maintain peace and tranquilli­ty in all areas of the India-China border region,” Gokhale said.

Billed by both sides as an informal meeting rather than a summit, with none of the pomp and ceremony of a state visit such as 21-gun salutes, the two men held talks on Friday that lasted far longer than expected. It also included a personal tour of a major museum by Xi.

Chinese state media has praised the tone of the trip.

The overseas edition of the ruling Communist Party’s official People’s Daily said in a frontpage commentary yesterday that “two great countries ought to have great cooperatio­n”, and showed a large picture of the two leaders shaking hands.

“There is reason to believe that this Wuhan meeting will increase mutual trust, manage and control disputes, deepen cooperatio­n and lead to a new phase in China-India relations,” it said.

“It is quite clear that strategic agreement between the two countries far exceeds the specific difference­s, and the need for cooperatio­n far exceeds local friction,” it said.

The official China Daily said in an editorial there was no denying mutual suspicion was keeping the two countries from working together.

“Yet, neither Beijing nor New Delhi calls the other an enemy, which means both expect bilateral ties to improve. Indeed, China and India are natural partners,” it said.

Despite the upbeat statements, which on Friday included Modi inviting Xi to India for a similar informal summit next year, the nations’ difference­s are significan­t.

As well as disputes over stretches of a 3,500km border, they are bumping up against each other in the Indian Ocean and squabbling over Xi’s signature Belt and Road infrastruc­ture initiative.

India signalled as recently as Tuesday its opposition to the grand trade and transport plan because one of its branches runs through Pakistani-administer­ed Kashmir, which India claims.

India has long been suspicious of China’s traditiona­lly close ties with Pakistan.

For its part, China has been concerned about United States efforts to draw India into a maritime “quad” of democracie­s, including Japan and Australia.

China is also suspicious of India’s hosting of the Dalai Lama and other exiled Tibetans.

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 ?? AFP PIC ?? Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Chinese President Xi Jinping in a house boat at East Lake in Wuhan yesterday.
AFP PIC Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Chinese President Xi Jinping in a house boat at East Lake in Wuhan yesterday.

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