China And India's Mutual Distrust
(BBC | April 21, 2003)
Indian Defence Minister George Fernandes is in Beijing
on a week-long official tour of China. The two Asian rivals will be reviewing relations that
have been marred by a long-running border dispute and
mutual distrust. This is the first time an Indian defence minister has
visited China since 1992.
George Fernandes has gone to Beijing with a large
delegation of senior diplomats and armed forces
officials.
Besides a wide-ranging review of mutual relations, he
will also be preparing the ground for a visit to China
by the Indian prime minister that might take place
later this year.
A long-standing critic of Chinese policy in Tibet,
George Fernandes caused a storm when he described
China as India's enemy number one soon after becoming
defence minister in 1998. Border row
Over three decades earlier, India's first prime
minister, Jawaharlal Nehru, had dreamt of Sino-Indian
friendship. He spelt out the "five principles of peaceful
co-existence" between the two countries in the
Panchasheel treaty of 1954.
But relations soured in 1959 when Tibetan spiritual
leader Dalai Lama fled communist persecution and was
given asylum in India with his 15,000 followers.
Soon after, the border dispute worsened between the
two countries. China claimed Aksai Chin in the western sector and
India claimed territories south of the McMahon line in
the eastern sector.
The McMahon line was established as the Sino-Indian
border after an agreement between Britain, then ruling
India, and Tibet in July 1914. Communist China refused to recognise it as the
international border. In 1962 the border dispute
resulted in a war.
Nuclear Tests
Despite many rounds of talks in the last decade there
has been little progress in demarcating the two
countries' 4,500-kilometre-long Himalayan border.
Their relations further nosedived in May 1998 after
India conducted nuclear tests. It was during those
tense times that Fernandes described China as
India's enemy number one.
India also accuses China of supporting Pakistan's
nuclear and missile programme. Though trade between the two neighbours has grown in
recent years, there has been widespread apprehension
of China's cheap consumer products flooding the Indian
market.
India's Government-controlled television has quoted
the Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Liu Jianchao as
saying that in the current "complicated international
situation" China and India should enhance cooperation
promoting regional peace and development.
Despite such demonstrations of good intentions,
Fernandes' week-long visit would appear to be too
short to dispel the mutual distrust of the last 40
years.
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