Beijing formally greets Modi; sends message though Indian envoy
BY Agencies25 May 2014 4:40 AM IST
Agencies25 May 2014 4:40 AM IST
China on Friday formally congratulated Prime Minister-designate Narendra Modi and sent a special message of goodwill expressing its desire to work with the new government to strengthen strategic and cooperative partnership with India.
The message was conveyed by Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi to Indian Ambassador to China Ashok K Kantha, at a meeting here. Wang’s message pertained to expanding ties and exchanges between the two countries, official sources said, declining to disclose the details. The meeting assumed significance as it is the first official-level contact between the two countries after the BJP’s victory in the general election.
Chinese foreign ministry sources said on Friday that Modi was expected to be officially greeted by the Chinese leadership after he is sworn in as Prime Minister on 26 May.
Foreign ministry spokesperson Hua Chunying had earlier issued a statement congratulating Modi on 17 May soon after the election results were announced.
Wang requested Ambassador Kantha to convey congratulations from the Chinese leadership to Modi, an Indian Embassy press release here said.
‘He added that the Chinese Government is willing to work with India to strengthen the strategic and cooperative partnership,’ the release said.
Wang also expressed appreciation for the contribution made by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh to India-China relations over the last 10 years, it said. While the protocol-conscious Chinese establishment waited for a formal moment for its leadership to establish contact with Modi, the official media here carried several articles praising his leadership and projected a bright future for Sino-Indian relations under his leadership.
The articles recalled Modi’s close association with China as chief minister of Gujarat and his four visits here scouting for investments. Most of the over USD 900 million worth of Chinese investments in India have been made in Gujarat.
Outlining the Chinese official perception about Modi’s victory, Hu Shisheng, Director of the South and South East Studies of the China Institute of Contemporary International Studies, an official think tank attached to the Chinese Foreign Ministry, said the massive mandate will make him a strong leader.
‘With such a big mandate from the people, and due to the fact that Modi has been decisive and assertive in nature, he will be a strong leader as he was so in the past ten years in Indian political arena,’ Hu said.
Besides helping to increase Chinese investments in India, Modi’s election could even brighten the prospects of settlement of the vexed border dispute, which so far limited the scope of bilateral ties, he said.
‘The BJP has no historical legacies and burden. India and China will have more space to find some initiatives out of the box’, he said.
The message was conveyed by Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi to Indian Ambassador to China Ashok K Kantha, at a meeting here. Wang’s message pertained to expanding ties and exchanges between the two countries, official sources said, declining to disclose the details. The meeting assumed significance as it is the first official-level contact between the two countries after the BJP’s victory in the general election.
Chinese foreign ministry sources said on Friday that Modi was expected to be officially greeted by the Chinese leadership after he is sworn in as Prime Minister on 26 May.
Foreign ministry spokesperson Hua Chunying had earlier issued a statement congratulating Modi on 17 May soon after the election results were announced.
Wang requested Ambassador Kantha to convey congratulations from the Chinese leadership to Modi, an Indian Embassy press release here said.
‘He added that the Chinese Government is willing to work with India to strengthen the strategic and cooperative partnership,’ the release said.
Wang also expressed appreciation for the contribution made by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh to India-China relations over the last 10 years, it said. While the protocol-conscious Chinese establishment waited for a formal moment for its leadership to establish contact with Modi, the official media here carried several articles praising his leadership and projected a bright future for Sino-Indian relations under his leadership.
The articles recalled Modi’s close association with China as chief minister of Gujarat and his four visits here scouting for investments. Most of the over USD 900 million worth of Chinese investments in India have been made in Gujarat.
Outlining the Chinese official perception about Modi’s victory, Hu Shisheng, Director of the South and South East Studies of the China Institute of Contemporary International Studies, an official think tank attached to the Chinese Foreign Ministry, said the massive mandate will make him a strong leader.
‘With such a big mandate from the people, and due to the fact that Modi has been decisive and assertive in nature, he will be a strong leader as he was so in the past ten years in Indian political arena,’ Hu said.
Besides helping to increase Chinese investments in India, Modi’s election could even brighten the prospects of settlement of the vexed border dispute, which so far limited the scope of bilateral ties, he said.
‘The BJP has no historical legacies and burden. India and China will have more space to find some initiatives out of the box’, he said.
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