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India says Modi raised China border incursions with Xi
by Staff Writers
New Delhi (AFP) Sept 18, 2014


Dalai Lama hails China's Xi as 'more open-minded'
Mumbai (AFP) Sept 18, 2014 - The Dalai Lama hailed Xi Jinping as "more open-minded" on Thursday as the Chinese president held talks with Prime Minister Narendra Modi during a rare visit to India.

"Xi Jinping's approach (is) more realistic, more open-minded" than that of his Chinese predecessor Hu Jintao, the Tibetan spiritual leader told reporters in Mumbai.

"Xi Jinping's thinking (is) more realistic, more open-minded, so he can learn more things from India," he continued.

"After all, Sino-India relations on the basis on new trust is very important, very essential."

He made the comments as the two political leaders held talks in New Delhi as part of Xi's three-day visit to India, where the Dalai Lama has lived since 1959.

The presence in India of the Dalai Lama, who fled Tibet following a failed uprising against Chinese rule there, is a source of tension between the two giant Asian rivals.

The Nobel Peace Prize winner supports "meaningful autonomy" for Tibet within China rather than outright independence. But China accuses the Dalai Lama of covertly campaigning for Tibet's independence and calls him a "splittist".

As Xi and Modi held formal talks on boosting trade and strategic ties, Tibetan students protested against China outside the venue in the capital.

About 20 students shouted "We want justice" for Tibet and waved Tibetan flags before police dragged them kicking and screaming into waiting buses outside the Hyderabad House.

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi raised the issue of incursions by Chinese troops on the disputed border during talks with visiting President Xi Jinping, the foreign ministry said Thursday.

Foreign ministry spokesman Syed Akbaruddin told AFP the issue was discussed on Wednesday evening during Xi's rare visit to India amid reports of a stand-off involving hundreds of troops from both sides in the remote Himalayan Ladakh region.

The incursion threatens to overshadow Xi's three-day visit, which includes more formal talks with Modi in New Delhi on Thursday that had been expected to focus on forging stronger investment and strategic ties.

Separately, Akbaruddin told reporters that the border issue was expected to be raised again during talks on Thursday.

"The summit meetings are occasion for leaders to raise all substantive issues having bearing on bilateral ties," said the spokesman.

"The prime minister took the opportunity to raise the issue last night with the visiting dignitary," he told reporters, when asked about the latest reported incursion.

As many as 1,000 Chinese troops had crossed over the border in Chumar in the southern area of Ladakh, according to the NDTV network and other local media.

A meeting between representatives of the two armies was held on Wednesday along their 3,380 kilometre (2,100 mile) long disputed border known as the Line of Actual Control, the reports said.

"About 1,000 Chinese troops crossed into the India side yesterday," a local lawmaker from Modi's party told AFP on condition of anonymity.

"The government has sent reinforcements. A flag meeting was also held last night (to try to diffuse the situation)," he added.

The neighbours, now nuclear-armed, fought a brief but bloody war in 1962 over the Indian state of Arunachal Pradesh in the eastern Himalayas, and are still embroiled in a bitter dispute over the territory.

Only last April India accused Chinese troops of intruding deep into Indian-held territory, sparking a three-week stand-off that was resolved when troops from both sides pulled back.

Small incursions of a few kilometres across the contested boundary are common but a mass build up of troops in the disputed territory is rare.

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