Sunday, August 29, 2010

China:India military ties on track despite visa row



China said today that military ties with India remained on track, despite a visa row that some reports said led to a freeze in defence contacts between the two big neighbours with sometimes testy relations.

An Indian defence source and some Indian news media said yesterday that defence ties with China were suspended after Beijing refused a visa to an Indian general from disputed Kashmir, where Pakistan and China also hold territory.

India's new Defence Minister AK Antony poses for a picture at a new conference in his office in New Delhi.





But the Indian Defence Minister A.K. Antony said “ties with China will continue”, and now China’s Ministry of Defence has also denied any freeze in ties with the Indian military.

“China has not suspended military exchanges with India, and nor has it received any notification from India of any such suspension,” the press office of the Chinese ministry said in a statement faxed to Reuters.

India and China have limited military ties, focused on visits by military chiefs and defence officials and occasional, small joint exercises.

But the official Chinese statement indicated that Beijing did not want the quarrel to curtail those contacts or seriously damage the overall relationship.

“China takes seriously developing military ties with India, and we are confident that both sides will stay focused on the broader picture of bilateral ties between our two countries, acting in a spirit of consultation and unity to promote the healthy development of military ties,” the statement said.

China is now India’s biggest trade partner and the spat, one of several over the last few years, is unlikely to snowball.

Friction is, however, also unlikely to abate entirely. Border disputes and mutual wariness remain.

India holds 45 per cent of the disputed Himalayan region of Kashmir, while Pakistan controls a third. China holds the rest.

Last year, India protested against a Chinese embassy policy of issuing different visas to residents of Indian Kashmir. New Delhi bristles at any hint that Kashmir, where a separatist insurgency has raged for two decades, is not part of India.

Distrust between the two economic powerhouses dates back to a 1962 border war, partly over the northeastern Indian state of Arunachal Pradesh that China claims in full.

China’s support for India’s foe Pakistan, which backs the Kashmir separatists and also claims the region in full, has exacerbated the tensions with Delhi.









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