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Sri Lankan leader to renegotiate China deals on visit
by Staff Writers
Colombo (AFP) March 24, 2015


India, China agree to foster peace on disputed border
New Delhi (AFP) March 24, 2015 - India and China agreed Tuesday to foster peace along their Himalayan border after wrapping up two days of talks designed to resolve a long-festering boundary dispute.

In comments issued after the round of talks in the Indian capital, the governments of both countries stressed their common desire to maintain calm and to press ahead with further negotiations.

"Both sides agreed to take necessary steps to maintain peace and tranquility in the border areas, which is a pre-requisite for continued growth of bilateral relations," the Indian foreign ministry said.

And the Chinese foreign ministry said both sides had agreed to make "joint efforts to safeguard peace and tranquility of the border area," which has been the scene of several recent military standoffs.

China's special representative Yang Jiechi and Indian national security adviser Ajit Doval led their respective delegations at the talks, which were first agreed during President Xi Jinping's visit to India last year.

The talks that started Monday were part of a push to make progress on the border dispute before Modi's expected visit to China in May.

China defeated India in a brief but bloody war in 1962 but an agreement on their border remains elusive, with each side regularly accusing the other of sending soldiers to encroach on territory.

Tensions peaked last September when hundreds of Chinese troops allegedly moved into the Himalayan territory just as Xi arrived in India on a landmark visit, casting a shadow over his talks with Modi.

While there was no details on how the negotiators were progressing, the Indian foreign ministry statement said both countries had "agreed to further expand such contacts as these constitute important confidence-building measures for maintaining peace and tranquility".

Speaking at a briefing in Beijing, Chinese foreign ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying said that Yang and Doval "spoke highly of the progress we have achieved".

"They agreed to bear in mind the national interests and the benefits of the two peoples, follow the right path and press ahead with the framework negotiations," Hua added.

National security adviser Doval last October said India would strive to fix the border problem with China, but without compromising on its own national security and territory.

Sri Lanka's new president will use a visit to Beijing to renegotiate more than $5.3 billion-worth of Chinese deals signed by his predecessor, a minister said Tuesday, calling it a strategy of "economic self-defence".

President Maithripala Sirisena has already suspended construction work on a major Chinese-funded land reclamation project commissioned by his predecessor Mahinda Rajapakse, who relied heavily on China to rebuild the country's infrastructure during his decade in power.

On Tuesday, finance minister Ravi Karunanayake said Chinese companies operating in Sri Lanka were "corrupt", using unusually blunt language days before Sirisena's first state visit to Beijing.

"What we want to tell the (Chinese) president is that the government of China is clean, but Chinese companies (operating in Sri Lanka) are corrupt," said Karunanayake, who will accompany Sirisena on the trip.

"We are basically saying, look at the costs these people have quoted and look at the internationally accepted rate," he told reporters.

Sri Lanka has already complained that it is paying too much interest on the Chinese loans funding its infrastructure development.

On Tuesday Karunanayake said it was also being overcharged by Chinese contractors undertaking the work.

"China understands that we are a small country and that we have a right to economic self-defence," he said.

"It is our taxpayers who will eventually have to foot the bill, that is why we will tell them (China) that we have a right to self-defence and to protect our people."

Sirisena, who starts his three-day China visit on Wednesday, has already suspended work on a $1.4 billion "port city" land reclamation project in Colombo. India considered the scheme a security risk since the island lies only around 30 kilometres (20 miles) off its southeast coast.

Sirisena has also ordered a review of other Beijing-financed projects and loans amid allegations of corruption.

Karunanayake said Sri Lanka's new government was determined to stamp out corruption, accusing the Rajapakse regime of involvement.

Sirisena made India -- rather than China -- his first foreign trip after winning elections in January, seeking to rebuild ties with Delhi damaged by tensions over Beijing's influence on the island.

Delhi was reportedly furious after Chinese submarines were allowed to dock in Colombo last year when Rajapakse was still in power.

Beijing has been accused of seeking to develop facilities around the Indian Ocean in a "string of pearls" strategy to counter the rise of rival India and secure its own economic interests.


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