» Story
 
  SocialTwist Tell-a-Friend
India not intimidated by China: Minister
Press Trust of India, Thursday October 22, 2009, New York
India is not intimidated by China and the border dispute between the two countries could be settled by talks, said Minister of State for External Affairs Preneet Kaur, noting that the media was over-playing the recent tensions between the neighbours.

"We are not intimidated by China. I think we are very confident of our own strength but certainly we are very confident that this issue can be settled by talks," said Kaur, who is on an official visit to New York.

"There has been a lot of media hype created over what the Chinese are doing," added Kaur.

Kaur vehemently denied, recent allegations, that India's leaders were appeasing China by insisting not reacting more strongly to escalation in tensions. "We have a good enough relationship to be able to sort all this out across the table, which is carrying on," said Kaur.

"There never has been any question of our giving up our sovereign right on Kashmir, there is no question of our giving up our sovereign right on Arunachal Pradesh," declared Kaur, responding to reports that Beijing is projecting Jammu and Kashmir as a separate country in maps and media kits.

"The prime minsters have reiterated, the foreign minister has reiterated that these our integral parts of India and will remain so," added Kaur.

Earlier this month, China protested against Prime Minister Manmohan Singhs visit to Arunachal Pradesh, and is pressuring India to scrap next months trip of the spiritual leader Dalai Lama to the state.

An editorial in, Peoples Daily, slammed New Delhi for being obsessed with a "superpower" status and turning "a blind eye to the concessions China had repeatedly made over the disputed border issues."

Earlier this week, Minister of State for External Affairs, Shashi Tharoor also told reporters here that disagreement between the two countries should not be "blown out of proportion."

 "I think its important that everyone scale down a little bit the temperature. "Its not as if there is any substantive reason for hostilities between our countries," said Tharoor, on the last leg of his trip to New York.
SocialTwist Tell-a-Friend     
Comments: Read | Post
Tags: China, India
Comments
Posted by A VAZ on Oct 23, 2009
"Trust but verify". This is the policy we must follow with China or any other country, friendly or otherwise. We have to use all our might and not necessarily military to resolve these issues with China, Pakistan, Nepal, Sri Lanka once and for all without sacrificing our strategic and long-term interests. We must ensure that we never ever lose guard or ensure that we have enough deterrent that China or any other country will never ever dare to challenge India's sovereignty. I only hope our covert and overt strategies are being worked out and politicians and the government apparatus is not sleeping and working behind the scenes. Currently we who are supposed to have the largest intellectual capital always seems to be in a reactive state to every external and internal political, social and economic threats. One of the reason is because we are 25 countries and every politician, religious, social and business leadership is bent on ensuring using all divisive or self-serving activities for their own short-sighted vested interests. Unless India and Indians learn to respect and believe together in common good and dwell on what unites and search and work for it, we will continue to remain hostages to two bit challenges from all sides of our geography and beyond. We cannot depend on powers who are thousands of miles away to do that. A divided house is always used by others to take advantage of itself. Have we not learnt from history right from all types of invasions to the Europeans who came in and got away with raping and destroying our country culturally, economically, socially and politically. What we learnt through our freedom struggle, we don't seem to be capitalizing. We Indians tend to be by nature very complacent and very short sighted and self-centred. Our inability to create a community which works together is one of our biggest problems. Casteism, Clans, Language, Region, State have been our issues. Our social (civic and religious) leadership carries the biggest blame because than the generally morally and intellectually corrrupt politicians and pliant bureaucrats thrive and the good ones among them get silenced. So, India and specially the young generation needs to wake up and realise this. You have the influence to change your parents and your grandparents. India! Please Wake up or you will always end up being a sleeping giant...
Posted by Rajeevs on Oct 22, 2009
Same thing happenned in 1962. All the way they said India-China bhai bhai but end of the day we got insulted for only reason being soft. We sent back the mighty british but we were shamed by our neighbors
Advertisement
Advertisement
On Facebook