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India, China reaffirm need for peace on border

In the wake of the recent controversies over Chinese incursions, India and China have reaffirmed the need to maintain peace and tranquility on border pending resolution of the “complex” issue. - India, China in talks for FTA - Any deviation at lower level will be dealt with: Raja - India cuts down US lobbying expenses, Pakistan ups - Will correct trade imbalance: Wen to PM - Barack Obama considers India and Manmohan Singh "part of his family" - PM takes wings Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, who met his Chinese counterpart Wen Jiabao here yesterday on the sidelines of the Asean-India and East Asia Summits, said the two leaders had discussed all issues, including the boundary row, problems concerning common rivers and matters related to Tibetan spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama. “I had a frank and constructive exchange of views with Premier Wen,” the PM told a press conference before winding up his two-day visit here. “We discussed all these issues and agreed that the existing mechanism of bilateral cooperation should be used to resolve all issues in the spirit of strategic and cooperative partnership,” he said. Singh said the two leaders had “reaffirmed the need to maintain peace and tranquility on the border pending a resolution of the boundary question. Both of us agreed that we should continue and strengthen efforts to build political trust and understanding.” Describing the boundary problem as a “complex issue” which “cannot be wished away”, Singh said: “Pending the resolution of the boundary question, both countries have an obligation to maintain peace and tranquillity along the border.” He noted that Chinese Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi would visit India in two days and the foreign ministers of the two countries would have an opportunity to “discuss all issues which have bearing on our relationship”. The Singh-Wen meeting came in the backdrop of war of words over Arunachal Pradesh and some other issues like the Dalai Lama’s proposed visit to the state. Spectrum irregularities The prime minister, meanwhile, said the Opposition’s allegations on irregularities in spectrum allocation were not correct. “In a democracy, charges are traded but that does not mean what Opposition is saying is right,” Singh told reporters when asked about the charges levelled against Communications Minister A Raja. Reports on dam ‘inconsistent’, says China Criticising the Indian media, China has said the reports of construction of a dam by it on the Brahmaputra river are “inconsistent with facts”. Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Ma Zhaoxu, in a recent media briefing in China, said: “As far as I know, the reports of the Indian media are inconsistent with facts”. Ma was replying to a question on recent media reports that China had decided to build a dam on the upstream section of Yalu Tsangpo river (Brahmaputra’s name on the Chinese side). Prime Minister Manmohan Singh had last week told a delegation from Arunachal Pradesh that China had not constructed any dam on the Brahmaputra river and only run-off-the-river construction had been made.


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