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26 April 2024

India's PM seeks to boost ties with China

Published
By Agencies
 
Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh headed for China for a three-day visit aimed at boosting the sometimes strained relations between the two Asian giants.

Singh left on Saturday and will meet with top Chinese leaders including President Hu Jintao, Premier Wen Jiabao and the Communist Party's No. 2 ranking official, Wu Bangguo.

Singh's China visit, the first by an Indian prime minister in nearly five years, comes as the two nations whose combined population of nearly 2.4 billion accounts for a third of humanity have forged their warmest ties in decades, mostly fueled by soaring trade between two of the world's fastest-growing economies.

In a sign of their closer ties, India and China held their first-ever joint war games at the end of last year.

But lingering suspicions and an unresolved border dispute, dating back to a brief but bloody 1962 war, have marred further progress.
Singh said he would discuss "issues relating to the boundary." This is expected to include the border dispute and India's concerns that Chinese troops have been making incursions over the de facto border an often vague line high in the Himalayas.

It appeared unlikely, however, the dispute over the 129,500-square kilometer (50,000 square-mile) area along the mountainous frontier would be resolved during this trip. Eleven rounds of talks have yielded little real progress so far.

In the past, ties between Indian and China have also been dogged by Beijing's strategic alliance with India's archrival, Pakistan, to which China has supplied arms and missile technology.

Beijing has also expressed concern about New Delhi's increasingly close relationship with Washington, including a recently signed civilian nuclear deal.

Despite this, relations have warmed in recent years, mainly because of booming two-way trade that soared to $37 billion (Dh135 billion) in 2007, almost touching the 2010 target of $40 billion (Dh146 billion)set during Hu's 2006 visit to New Delhi.

Singh said both countries and the world stood to gain from the growth of India and China.

"Our bilateral relations are now poised to enter a vibrant and dynamic phase," he said. (AP)