During Visit to China, Indian Foreign Secretary Shares Evidence on Masood Azhar

While the readouts said common interests were discussed, MEA spokesperson Raveesh Kumar said India shared all evidences of terrorist activities of the Jaish-e-Mohammad and its chief.

New Delhi: India has shared evidence with China of activities of terror group Jaish-e-Mohammad and its chief Masood Azhar during Indian foreign secretary Vijay Gokhale’s ongoing visit to Beijing.

Though the visit is part of a routine for foreign office consultations, it comes in the backdrop of China’s continuing technical hold on the listing of Masood Azhar under the UNSC’s 1267 Al-Qaeda Sanctions committee.

His main discussions were with his counterparts executive vice foreign minister of China Le Yucheng and vice foreign minister Kong Xuanyou. He also called on Chinese foreign minister and state councillor Wang Yi.

While both the Indian and Chinese readouts mention that common interests were discussed, there was no specific reference to the UNSC sanctions committee.

However, separately, the MEA spokesperson Raveesh Kumar informed that India has “shared with China all evidences of terrorist activities of Jaish-e-Mohammad and its leader Masood Azhar”.

“It is now for the 1267 Sanctions Committee and other authorized bodies of the U.N. to take a decision on the listing of Masood Azhar. India will continue to pursue all available avenues to ensure that terrorist leaders who are involved in heinous attacks on our citizens are brought to justice,” he added.

However, Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson Geng Shuang dodged a question on the 1267 sanction committee and India’s participation in the second Belt and Road summit.

“As I said earlier, the common interests of China and India far outweigh the differences. I hope that the two sides will strengthen coordination and cooperation and safeguard the positive momentum of the healthy development of bilateral relations. In this regard, China is ready to work with India,” Geng said on Monday.

Vijay Gokhale with Chinese foreign minister Wang Yi. Credit: Twitter/Raveesh Kumar

On March 14, China had put a hold for the fourth time in nine years on the proposal moved by the US, UK and France to designate JeM chief Masood Azhar as a global terrorist. The proposal sough to bring him under the UN sanctions regime that includes an asset freeze, arms embargo and travel ban.

The initiative was led by the three Western permanent members of the UNSC after the suicide bomb attack on the CRPF convoy that left 40 dead in Pulwama. Incidentally, India has shared evidence about Masood Azhar’s active role in fomenting terror , including audio files, with members of the UNSC.

India conducted airstrikes on a JeM facility inside Pakistan on February 26, which led to a retaliatory incursion by the Pakistani Air Force next day. Incidentally, Indian external affairs minister Sushma Swaraj was in China for trilateral meeting with her Russian and Chinese counterparts when the Pakistani jets dropped bombs inside Kashmir.

Also Read: No April 23 Deadline, but Moving to Resolve Masood Azhar Listing at UNSC: China

China’s ‘hold’ delayed any decision by the UNSC committee by six months.

At the time, India said that it was “disappointed” with the hold, but the official statement did not name or castigate China like in previous instances.

Two weeks later, after Beijing stopped the listing, the three permanent members circulated a draft resolution in the UNSC to blacklist Masood Azhar.

Beijing was informed that it should remove its technical hold early this week, or the permanent members would move the resolution in UNSC. This could force China to wield its veto in the chamber of the horseshoe table.

According to the MEA’s press release on Gokhale’s trip, the discussions reviewed the progress in bilateral ties since the Wuhan Informal Summit in April 2018 and the forthcoming engagement calendars. A second informal summit would be held this year.

Interestingly, the Indian press note specifically identified ‘Indo-Pacific’ as an agenda item among the plethora of “regional and international issues of common interest”.

The Chinese foreign ministry’s spokesperson and readout both highlighted that “common interests are far greater than differences”.

“The two sides should strengthen unity and cooperation, maintain the positive momentum of healthy and stable development of bilateral relations since the meeting between the leaders of the two countries, and safeguard the common interests of emerging markets and developing countries,” he said.

China Praises Pakistan’s ‘Restraint’ Over Kashmir Tensions

Pakistan is facing pressure from global powers to act against groups carrying out attacks in India, including Jaish-e-Mohammed, which claimed responsibility for the February 14 attack which killed at least 40 paramilitary police.

Beijing: China has praised Pakistan’s “restraint” and willingness to talk with India to ease tensions between the two countries after a deadly bombing in Indian-controlled Kashmir last month.

Pakistan is facing pressure from global powers to act against groups carrying out attacks in India, including Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM), which claimed responsibility for the February 14 attack which killed at least 40 paramilitary police.

The incident led to the most serious conflict in years between the nuclear-armed neighbours, with cross-border air strikes and a dogfight over the skies of Kashmir. The crisis eased after Pakistan returned a downed Indian pilot on Friday. Visiting Pakistan on Wednesday, Chinese Vice Foreign Minister Kong Xuanyou said Beijing and Islamabad were “all weather” strategic partners and that they always supported each other, China’s Foreign Ministry said in a statement on Thursday.

Also read: Qureshi Hints Pak May Not Oppose Listing of JeM Chief as Global Terrorist

“China has paid close attention to the present situation between Pakistan and India, and appreciates Pakistan’s remaining calm and exercising restraint from the beginning, and persisting in pushing to lower the temperature with India via dialogue,” the ministry paraphrased Kong as saying.

China maintains that the sovereignty and territorial integrity of all countries should be respected and does not want to see “acts that violate the norms of international relations”, Kong added.

“China calls on Pakistan and India to refrain from taking actions that aggravate the situation, show goodwill and flexibility, launch dialogue as soon as possible, and work together to maintain regional peace and stability,” he said.

He went on to say that China is willing to continue to play a constructive role in this regard.

The ministry said Kong had met Prime Minister Imran Khan, army chief General Qamar Javed Bajwa and Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi.

China Sends Vice Foreign Minister to Pakistan to Discuss Indo-Pak Tensions

China said it has been promoting peace and stability in the region and hoped that Pakistan and India will maintain friendly relations.

Beijing: China said on Wednesday that it has despatched vice foreign minister Kong Xuanyou to Islamabad to discuss the Indo-Pak tensions following the Pulwama terrorist attack.

“He (Kong) is now visiting Pakistan. He is in communication with Pakistan on the India-Pakistan situation,” Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Lu Kang told a media briefing here.

Tensions escalated between India and Pakistan in the wake of the Pulwama terror attack in Kashmir which killed 40 CRPF personnel and was claimed by Pakistan-based terror group Jaish-e-Mohammad (JeM).

After the suicide attack, India carried out airstrikes on a training camp of JeM in Balakot in Pakistan on February 26. In the operation, India claimed that a very large number of JeM terrorists, trainers, senior commanders and groups of jihadis who were being trained for suicide attacks were killed.

Also read: Four Reasons India Has Little Cause to Cheer the Balakot Airstrike and its Aftermath

The next day, the Pakistan Air Force retaliated and downed a MiG-21 in an aerial confrontation and captured Indian pilot Abhinandan Varthaman, who was handed over to India last Friday.

“His visit is designed for communication with Pakistan for the situation concerning both India and Pakistan. China has been promoting peace and stability in this region. We hope that Pakistan and India will maintain friendly relations,” Lu said.

Hours after India’s Balakot airstrike, China, which has good diplomatic ties with Islamabad, urged India and Pakistan to “exercise restraint” and asked New Delhi to carry out its fight against terrorism through international cooperation.

“We have taken note of the relevant reports. I want to say that India and Pakistan are both important countries in South Asia. A sound relationship and cooperation between the two serves the interests of both the countries and peace and stability in South Asia,” Lu had said.

On Wednesday, he said Pakistan has been making efforts to combat terrorism.

“In fact, Pakistan has been making efforts and exercised policies to combat terrorism. We think we should encourage this. We also hope relevant parties will create an enabling atmosphere to help Pakistan to cooperate with other parties to form synergy,” Lu said.

To a question on whether Kong would visit India too, Lu said “China is in contact with India and Pakistan concerning the current circumstances”.

Pakistan’s Foreign Minister Shah Muhammad Qureshi earlier said that China would send a special envoy to Pakistan and India to defuse the tensions.

When asked whether Kong would also discuss the recent resolution at the Russia, India, China (RIC) Foreign Ministers’ meeting at the Chinese city of Wenzhou where the three countries agreed for policy coordination to eradicate breeding grounds of terrorism, Lu said that the resolution of root causes of terrorism is also important.

“As to counter terrorism issue in the trilateral meeting, I shall say a key point is that terrorism is a complex issue. We should address the symptom and the root causes of terrorism that is the premise for what was proposed by foreign Ministers of the three countries,” he said.

About the latest resolution submitted by France, the UK and the US in the UN Security Council to list JeM chief Masood Azhar as a global terrorist, Lu said China would take a conducive decision to resolve the differences.

China so far stonewalled India’s efforts to declare Azhar as a global terrorist by the UNSC.

Also read: Reading Between the Lines, from Pulwama to the Balakot Airstrike

To a question whether China would support the resolution or abstain, Lu said, “like we said on many occasions the UNSC and affiliated bodies, it is a very serious issue for them to list the terrorists. China will have discussions with relevant bodies.”

Asked whether China’s stand would be different this time as JeM has admitted its role in the Pulwama attack, Lu said that the UNSC and its affiliated bodies have detailed criteria and standards for their work.

“China is engaged in consultations strictly in line with the standards. It requires high responsibility for us to work in these multilateral organisations and I can assure you that what China does will be conducive to resolution of such issue with high responsibility,” he said.

Lu also welcomed Pakistan’s plans to open a corridor for the visa-free visit of Indian Sikh pilgrims to Guru Nanak shrine in Kartarpur.

Pakistan on Tuesday said it will send a delegation to India on March 14 to discuss a draft agreement for setting up the corridor to facilitate visa-free visit of Sikh pilgrims to Kartarpur.

“We also noted this progress. We believe this is conducive to easing the situation. This is a positive progress,” Lu said while replying to a question.

“Pakistan and India are neighbours that can’t be moved away. The good neighbourliness and friendliness between the two countries are in line with their fundamental interests as well as the peace stability of the region,” he added.

China Wants Bhutan’s ‘Active Participation’ in the Belt and Road Initiative

This was said after the first visit by a senior Chinese government functionary to Bhutan since the Doklam stand-off last year.

New Delhi: Calling for its “active participation”, China has claimed that Bhutan admires the “Belt and Road Initiative”. China also said it considers relations between the two countries to be a “model” for partnership.

The apparent bonhomie between the two countries over the Belt and Road Initiative was part of the official press release issued by the Chinese foreign ministry at the end of the two-day visit by Chinese vice foreign minister Kong Xuanyou to Bhutan. This was the first visit by a senior Chinese government functionary to Bhutan since the Doklam stand-off last year. China’s ambassador to India Luo Zhaohui also accompanied the delegation.

The visit takes place just a week before the current Bhutanese government’s tenure ends on July 31. The next parliamentary elections will likely take place in September.

The press release from the Bhutanese foreign ministry was perfunctory, with no details about the discussions. It noted that the Chinese official held discussions with Bhutan’s foreign minister Damcho Dorji.

It also mentioned that Bhutanese King Jigme Khesar Namgyel Wangchuck had granted an audience to the Chinese vice foreign minister, who also called on Prime Minister Tshering Tobgay.

At a weekly briefing on Tuesday, Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson Geng Shuang said that two sides “exchanged in-depth views on the China-Bhutan relations and border issues and reached common understandings”. He also referred to the press release issued by the ministry, which was in Mandarin.

A rough translation of the press release said that China respects Bhutan’s “independence, sovereignty and territorial integrity”.

While stating that China respected Bhutan’s political system and development path, the senior Chinese foreign official also drew attention to “Bhutan’s independent foreign policy of peace”.

During the Doklam crisis, there had been almost daily statements from the Chinese foreign ministry which accused India of violating Bhutan’s sovereignty by taking a stand on its behalf against road construction by Chinese troops.

Bhutan had in a June 29 press release stated that the Chinese construction of a road from Dokola to Zompheri was a “direction violation” of written agreements between the two sides on maintaining status quo at the border.

During the stand-off, which lasted nearly nine weeks, China had implied several times that India was forcibly continuing to challenge the Chinese soldiers by overturning a more moderate Bhutanese position. This was denied by the Bhutanese government.

While Bhutan did not give any details, the border issue certainly did come up, as per the Chinese version of events. “The two sides should continue to push forward the border negotiations, abide by the principled consensus reached, jointly safeguard peace and tranquility in the border areas, and create positive conditions for the final settlement of the border issue,” said the read-out from Beijing. China and Bhutan hold annual border talks, but had skipped them last year.

The Chinese foreign ministry on Tuesday added that Beijing had conveyed to Thimpu that it was “willing to work with the parties to maintain high-level contacts, expand pragmatic cooperation, strengthen multilateral communication and coordination, and achieve common development on the basis of mutual respect and mutual benefit”.

According to a translation, the press release also noted that China wanted Bhutan to take part in their flagship initiative, previously known as ‘One Belt, One Road’, to finance and construct infrastructure projects.

“China welcomes Bhutan’s active participation in the “Belt and Road Initiative” and sharing China’s development dividend,” said the press note, referring to the message conveyed by the visiting senior Chinese diplomat.

Incidentally, Bhutan was on the only country, besides India, which did not attend the Belt and Road Summit in Beijing last year, despite an official invitation.

The Chinese release mentioned Bhutan’s apparent admiration for the Belt and Road Initiative twice. It noted that the Bhutanese leadership “…welcomed the positive progress of the “One Belt, One Road” initiative put forward by President Xi Jinping, praised China’s contribution to promoting world peace, prosperity and development, and its greater role in the international arena”.

The two sides also apparently agreed that “although the diplomatic relations between the two countries have not been established, the traditional friendship between the two countries is a model for large and small countries”. Bhutan told the Chinese official, as per Beijing’s press release, that it was “willing to maintain communication with China on bilateral relations and border issues”.

Last month, the Bhutanese prime minister gave his last state of the nation speech for the current term. “Our relations with China, the second largest economy in the world and an emerging global power, is increasing and we continue to maintain peaceful and cordial relations,” said Tshering Tobgay during a section on relations with neighbours.

He added, “The government continues to take a strategic long-term view of our engagement with China to ensure that our national interests are secured.”

India, China Agree to Improve Strategic Communication at the End of Informal Talks

Both the Chinese and Indian press notes, using similar language, said that the two countries have the “maturity and wisdom” to handle their differences through peaceful discussions and by “respecting each other’s concerns and aspirations”.

New Delhi: After spending nearly nine hours in each other’s company, the first ‘informal’ summit between Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Chinese President Xi Jinping  concluded on Saturday with a commitment to tell their militaries to talk more to each other to prevent ‘situations’ at border areas and a promise to maintain “strategic communication”.

In the run-up to the April 27-28 events, both sides had stressed that the ‘informal’ summit was to discuss larger issues without any set agenda and without the accompanying protocol of an elaborate diplomatic event.

Overall, the two sides counted six meetings between the two leaders, with four of them being one-on-one. The first restricted meeting was at the museum on Friday, followed by the tour of the artefacts. Their officials joined them for talks and dinner at the East Lake Guesthouse.

This morning, they walked along the green waterfront of East Lake, took part in a tea ceremony, chatted on a houseboat and continued their conversation over lunch.

There was a sense of déjà vu at Wuhan – the two leaders have had similarly photogenic encounters at their hometowns of Ahmedabad and Xian – but the main difference in the current ‘informal’ iteration of those summits was there were no agreements inked or joint statements issued. Instead, both sides organised separate media briefings and issued their own press releases.

Speaking to reporters just before the Indian delegation left Wuhan, foreign secretary Vijay Gokhale said that an “important takeaway” was that “this kind of arrangement between the two leaders of informal meetings where they discuss issues of common interest will continue”.

In his opening remarks at the delegation level talks on Friday evening, the Chinese president had called for further ‘informal’ meetings from “time to time”. The Indian prime minister reciprocated and hoped that the next one would be held in India in 2019.

“The other important takeaway is the agreement between them that greater strategic communication at the leadership level and at the level of the two governments allows for a free and frank discussion on all matters of interests,” said Gokhale.

He noted that the two leaders agreed that “India and China, as major powers with strategic and decisional autonomy, will pursue peaceful, stable and balanced relations and such a relationship will be a positive factor for stability amidst the current global uncertainties”.

Echoing his Indian counterpart, Chinese vice foreign Kong Xuanyou described the visit as a “milestone” in bilateral ties.

He told reporters that President Xi had said the problems between India and China were of a  “limited, temporary nature”.

According to Reuters, Kong noted that both Asian countries have “concrete differences but the summit was not aimed at addressing these specific issues”.

In answer to a query, India’s senior-most diplomat also said that no specific issues, like Indian membership of the Nuclear Suppliers Group and the UN listing of the Pakistan-based terrorist Masood Azhar were discussed. Instead, it will be left to the 20-odd institutional mechanisms which exist bilaterally to thrash out a solution to these prickly matters.

“[Both] leaders also decided that existing mechanisms would be improved and [made] effective and used to address some of these issues,” said Gokhale.

New directive: improve communication

The two leaders were meeting in Wuhan about eight months after the 72-day-long face-off at the Bhutan-India-China tri-junction was ‘resolved’. Not surprisingly, the pending boundary issue was rather high on the priority list.

“On the issue of India-China boundary questions, the two leaders endorsed the work of the special representatives (SRs) in their effort to find a fair, reasonable and mutually acceptable settlement and the two leaders also underscored that in the meantime, it is important to maintain peace and tranquillity in all areas of the India-china border region,” said Gokhale.

He noted that the parameters of the discussion between the SRs have already been established and talks were in the “second stage” of resolving the boundary dispute.

The language Gokhale used was boilerplate bilateralspeak, and indicates the two leaders have not been able to move the boundary issue beyond where the two SRs have brought it after 20 rounds of discussion over 15 years.

However, Modi and Xi did agree to give operational instructions to improve communication between the two armies, so as to prevent border incidents from escalating into diplomatic crisis.

“To this end, the two leaders decided that they would [advise] strategic guidance to their respective militaries to strengthen communication, to build trust and understanding, to implement various confidence building measures which have already been agreed by the two sides and to strengthen existing institutional mechanisms to prevent and manage situations in the border areas,” said Gokhale. This was also mentioned in a press release issued by the Ministry of External Affairs.

Earlier on Friday, the Chinese defence ministry spokesperson had indicated that “difficulties” in bilateral relations between the militaries will be stabilised following a signal from top.

Despite some difficulties and obstacles in the bilateral military relationship, we are willing to deepen understanding, enhance mutual trust, properly handle differences, and incessantly accumulate positive energy for the healthy and stable development of military ties under the guidance of the important consensus reached between leaders of both countries,” said China’s ministry of national defence spokesperson, Wu Qian.

On this topic, the Chinese government’s press release issued on Saturday after the informal summit stated: “The two militaries will strengthen confidence-building measures and enhance communication and cooperation to uphold border peace and tranquillity”. The Special Representatives (SR) will seek a “fair, reasonable and mutually acceptable” solution to the boundary question, it added.

Both the Chinese and Indian press notes had similar language – that the two countries have the “maturity and wisdom” to handle their differences through peaceful discussions and by “respecting each other’s concerns and aspirations”. The Chinese press note specifically harked backed to the five principles of co-existence , or‘Panchsheel’, though this was not mentioned in the Indian press release.

Joint economic projects in the region

The two leaders also discussed using their political and economic influence to foster economic development in the region.

According to Indian sources, the two countries could explore a joint economic project in Afghanistan. The project has not yet been identified, but it would be finally decided with the help of the Afghan government.

Incidentally, this is not the first time that the two Asian powers are considering Afghanistan as a platform for building trust and leveraging their respective advantages. In 2010, the Indian and Chinese SRs had discussed a joint project in the war-ravaged country, but it never fructified.

Belt and Road figured in talks

President Xi did bring up his flagship ‘Belt and Road Initiative’ (BRI), which Gokhale indicated was in the context of both sides speaking “of their respective efforts to contribute to regional and global economic development”.

India has been wary of China’s BRI, since it believes the connectivity project has strategic objectives, rather than being a purely economic proposal. Publicly, India has mainly argued that it opposes BRI as it violates Indian sovereignty by routing  the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor through Indian territory currently under the occupation of Pakistan.

Answering a question, Chinese vice foreign minister Kong said that China “does not think it is important whether India accepts China’s Belt and Road infrastructure project and China won’t force it to”. It is not clear from these remarks whether India’s concerns about BRI projects in third countries being a threat to Indian security have been addressed.

India’s priorities – like terrorism and the yawning trade surplus – was highlighted by Gokhale and also found mention in the MEA press release.

“Open, multipolar, pluralist and participatory global economic order”

“The prime minister and president also recognised the common threat of terrorism. Both reiterated strong condemnation and resolute opposition to terrorism in all its forms and manifestations. And both committed to cooperate further in counter-terrorism,” said the Indian foreign secretary.

The issue of terrorism was mentioned by the Chinese side as one of the global challenges that both side will cooperate on. “Both sides agree to promote more active regional and international cooperation. They agree to join hands in offering innovating and sustainable solutions to global challenges such as epidemics, natural disasters, climate change and terrorism,” said the Chinese minister of foreign affairs’ statement.

The Indian prime minister raised the matter of “balancing trade”, with more access for agricultural and pharmaceutical exports. While bilateral trade volume has ballooned to $84 billion in 2017, the trade deficit in favour of China stands at a whopping $51 billion.

While the Indian press release also spoke of building an “open, multipolar, pluralist and participatory global economic order”, there was no statement of explicit opposition to “protectionism”, unlike the Chinese communique.

The two leaders also stressed the need for more people-to-people exchanges. “Both leaders felt that while exchanges were going on, these were fragmented to some extent and it was important that the trust and understanding between the two governments/two leaders should find their way to the people, to public opinion,” said Gokhale.

The Indian foreign secretary pointed out that there had been a “great effort” by both countries to ensure the relationship was “positive” and that the leaders had a “certain comfort level in being able to communicate frankly” during the informal summit.

“While I agree that there have been positive vibes from the Chinese side (in the run-up to the summit), you will agree that there have been equally positive vibes from the Indian side,” he said.

Last month, the foreign secretary issued a circular advising Indian officials against attending events to mark 60 years of exile of the Tibetan spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama. Official sources had claimed that events to mark the exile would have been political in nature and violated the 1988 understanding reached between India and China.

At Wuhan, the Chinese vice foreign minister told the media that “China does not think the Indian government has changed its official position that Tibet is a part of China”.

Xi and Modi Seek New Relationship After India-China Summit

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi spent around 24 hours in the central Chinese city of Wuhan for meetings with President Xi Jinping, an ice-breaking trip both hoped would allow candour and nurture trust.

Wuhan: The leaders of China and India agreed to open a new chapter in their relationship on Saturday after an informal summit, just months after a dispute over a stretch of their high-altitude Himalayan border rekindled fears of war.

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi spent around 24 hours in the central Chinese city of Wuhan for meetings with President Xi Jinping, an ice-breaking trip both hoped would allow candour and nurture trust.

Billed as an informal get-together rather than a summit, the two men held talks on Friday that lasted far longer than expected, and on Saturday chatted over tea on a boat trip round a scenic lake.

“President Xi stressed that the issues between China and India are of a limited, temporary nature but the relationship between the two countries is extensive and ongoing,” Chinese Vice Foreign Minister Kong Xuanyou told reporters in Wuhan.

Their differences are significant: as well as disputes over stretches of a 3,500 km (2,200 miles) border – the two fought a brief border war in 1962 – the Asian giants have squabbled 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.

Xi and Modi agreed their problems would be resolved with time.

China’s foreign ministry, in a separate statement, cited Xi as telling Modi their nations were major drivers of world economic growth and a good relationship would be positive for global stability.

Indian Foreign Secretary Vijay Gokhale said both leaders had agreed they could handle their differences peacefully.

“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,” he said.

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

Kong said Modi and Xi did not discuss last summer’s border flare-up, although they agreed to seek a fair, reasonable and mutually acceptable settlement to the boundary problem.

“The biggest takeaway was that we have to increase mutual trust,” he said. “The reason that we had this dispute was because we were both mistrustful of each other.”

Significant differences 

Chinese state media praised the tone of the trip.

The overseas edition of the ruling Communist Party’s official People’s Daily said in a front page commentary on Saturday “two great countries ought to have great co-operation”. It published a large photo of the two leaders shaking hands.

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, there were no concrete agreements reached.

Still, Kong said there are a number of projects China and India can cooperate on in the spirit of Belt and Road.

“We won’t force them to do something they don’t want to do,” he said.

India has long been apprehensive about China’s traditionally close ties with Pakistan.

For its part, China has been concerned about US 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.

Kong said China did not believe India had changed its official position that Tibet is part of China.

Modi and Xi are set to meet again soon, when Modi visits China in June for a summit of the China and Russia-led Shanghai Cooperation Organisation security bloc.

(Reuters) 

China Envoy Says ‘Complex’ Reasons Why He Has Not Been to North Korea

Song Tao, who heads the ruling Chinese Communist Party’s international department, was the last top official from China to go to Pyongyang.

North Korean soldiers stand guard during a high-level talks at the truce village of Panmunjom in the demilitarised zone separating the two Koreas, South Korea, January 9, 2018. Credit: Reuters/Korea Pool

North Korean soldiers stand guard during a high-level talks at the truce village of Panmunjom in the demilitarised zone separating the two Koreas, South Korea, January 9, 2018. Credit: Reuters/Korea Pool

Beijing: China‘s special envoy for North Korea said on Friday that there were “complex” reasons why he has yet to visit the country, but that China‘s efforts to help bring about the denuclearisation of the Korean peninsula and foster peace were relentless and unchanged.

Vice foreign minister Kong Xuanyou, who is ethnically Korean, became Beijing’s special envoy to North Korea last August.

His predecessor, Wu Dawei, made his last publicly announced visit to North Korea in early 2016, urging restraint after North Korea announced a plan to put a satellite into orbit with a long-range rocket.

“The reason I’ve not been to North Korea since being appointed the Chinese government’s special envoy for Korean peninsula matters is very complex,” Kong told reporters.

“But no matter whether or not [I] go to North Korea, our firm stance on being dedicated to maintaining peace and stability on the peninsula and the denuclearisation process has not changed,” he added.

“Our proactive diplomatic mediation work has also not stopped for a moment.”

Song Tao, who heads the ruling Chinese Communist Party’s international department, was the last top official from China to go to Pyongyang, in November.

Song was there to discuss the outcome of a party congress in China and statements from both countries made no mention of the nuclear crisis.

North Korea has shown less and less interest in dealing with China diplomatically over its weapons programme or listening to Beijing’s pleas.

China is North Korea’s closest ally, but it has been infuriated by the North’s repeated missile and nuclear tests and has signed up for increasingly tough UN sanctions on the isolated nation.

Kong said China welcomed a recent improvement in the situation, with the two Koreas reaching agreement on North Korea’s participation in next month’s Winter Olympics.

China says sanctions are not the final way to resolve the issue, and has repeatedly called for a return to diplomacy and the restart of a six-party talks process with North Korea, which includes China, the two Koreas, the US, Russia and Japan and which collapsed in 2008.

(Reuters)