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Don’t aggravate problems on border, China tells India

Don’t aggravate problems on border, China tells India
Updated 01 December 2013

Don’t aggravate problems on border, China tells India

Don’t aggravate problems on border, China tells India

NEW DELHI/SHANGHAI: China on Saturday urged India not to aggravate problems on the border shared by the two nations, a day after the Indian president toured a disputed region and called it an integral part of the country.
The two countries, which fought a brief border war in 1962, only last month signed a pact to ensure that differences on the border do not spark a confrontation.
However, President Pranab Mukherjee’s visit to Arunachal Pradesh that China claims as its own provoked a fresh exchange of words.
“We hope that India will proceed along with China, protecting our broad relationship, and will not take any measures that could complicate the problem, and together we can protect peace and security in the border regions,” China’s official news agency, Xinhua, quoted Qin Gang, a spokesman of the country’s ministry of foreign affairs, as saying.
“Currently China-India relations are developing favorably and both sides are going through special envoy meetings and amicable discussions to resolve the border dispute between our two countries.”
Mukherjee was on a routine visit to Arunachal, which has been part of the Indian state for decades, and where India has regularly been holding elections. However, China has of late grown increasingly assertive and questioned New Delhi’s claims over the territory, calling it instead South Tibet.
Mukherjee told members of the state’s legislative assembly it was “a core stakeholder in India’s Look East foreign policy” that intends to link the country’s northeast with South East Asia.
“We seek to make our neighbors partners in our development,” Mukherjee said in Itanagar, the state capital. “We believe that India’s future and our own best economic interests are served by closer integration with Asia.”
China lays claim to more than 90,000 sq km (35,000 sq miles) disputed by New Delhi in the eastern sector of the Himalayas, while India says China occupies 38,000 square km of its territory on the Aksai Chin plateau in the west.