India trying to convince China that our rise won’t harm its ascent: Jaishankar | Latest News India - Hindustan Times
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India trying to convince China that our rise won’t harm its ascent: Jaishankar

New Delhi | ByPTI
Jan 18, 2017 04:10 PM IST

In the backdrop of growing unease in India-China ties, India said on Wednesday it has been trying to convince the Chinese government that its ascent is not harmful to the rise of China and that both countries should be sensitive on matters relating to sovereignty.

In the backdrop of growing unease in India-China ties, India said on Wednesday it has been trying to convince the Chinese government that its ascent is not harmful to the rise of China and that both countries should be sensitive on matters relating to sovereignty.

Chill has set in India-China ties following Beijing’s opposition to India’s membership at the Nuclear Suppliers Group as well as the neighbour blocking India’s move at the UN to designate Masood Azhar as a global terrorist.(Reuters File Photo)
Chill has set in India-China ties following Beijing’s opposition to India’s membership at the Nuclear Suppliers Group as well as the neighbour blocking India’s move at the UN to designate Masood Azhar as a global terrorist.(Reuters File Photo)

Read: Full text of foreign secretary Jaishankar’s speech at Raisina Dialogue

Hindustan Times - your fastest source for breaking news! Read now.

In an address at the Raisina Dialogue, foreign secretary S Jaishankar took strong objection to the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) which passes through Pakistan-occupied-Kashmir, saying there should have been some reflection on India’s unhappiness over it.

“What we are trying to do is to convince China that our rise is not harmful to China’s rise just as China’s rise need not be to India’s rise,” he said at the gathering attended by representatives from across the world.

Read: India’s NSG membership can’t be Obama administration’s farewell gift: China

Chill has set in India-China ties following Beijing’s opposition to India’s membership at the Nuclear Suppliers Group as well as the neighbour blocking India’s move at the UN to designate Masood Azhar as a global terrorist.

During the interactive session, during which he touched upon a vast array of subjects concerning international relations, Jaishankar said the SAARC has been made “ineffective due to the insecurity of one member”.

Identifying terrorism as the most “pervasive and serious challenge” to international security, the Foreign Secretary said developing a serious global response to it is of the highest priority but rued that it is hard to do.

On ties with China, Jaishankar said there has been overall broadening of ties, especially in areas of business and people-to-people contact, but they have been overshadowed by differences on certain political issues.

Read: ‘India must rethink opposition to Chinese investment in Lanka’

“But it is important for the two countries not to lose sight of the strategic nature of their engagement, or falter in their conviction that their rise can be mutually supportive,” he said.

Replying to a question on CPEC, he said both countries should show sensitivity to each other’s sovereignty.

“China is a country which is very sensitive on matters concerning its sovereignty. So we would expect that they would have some understanding of other people’s sensitivity on their sovereignty,” he said.

Jaishankar said the CPEC passes through a “piece of land that we call Pakistan-occupied-Kashmir which is territory belongs to India and which is illegally occupied by Pakistan”.

Read: PM Modi slams Pakistan over terrorism, but reaches out to China

He said the project has been undertaken without consultation with India and that its sensitivity and concerns towards it are natural.

On India’s overall ties with China, he said both the countries have opened up significantly since 1945.

“In a sense, both of us, if you step back and look at it, are opening up a very close international order. When people talk about change since 1945, I think two big changes are really India and China.

“I would say if China had not opened up the international order the way it did, I think it would be much harder today for India also to exploit those phases. There is a high degree of shared interests,” he said.

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