Indian
Prime Minister Narendra Modi has called for peace on the shared border with
China. The remarks come amid a flare-up of tensions on the border and during a
visit by the Chinese president.
Deutsche Welle, 18 Sep 2014
Modi called
for peace on Thursday in a joint press conference with Chinese President Xi
Jinping, who is on his first visit to India since assuming office two years
ago.
"There
should be peace in our relations and in the borders. If this happens we can
realize true potential of our relations," Indian Prime Minister Narendra
Modi said during the press conference in New Delhi.
Modi
addressed the contentious Sino-Indian border dispute after reports of an
early-morning incursion by Chinese troops in the Himalayan region of Ladakh.
According
to media reports, around 1,000 Chinese soldiers had crossed the border, forcing
India to react: "The government has sent reinforcements," an
anonymous source told AFP news agency.
Xi Jinping
responded at the press conference, saying China was committed to working with
its neighbor to maintain "peace and tranquility" on the disputed
border.
"We
also have the sincerity to work with India to maintain peace and tranquility in
the border areas before we are finally able to settle the border
question," Xi added.
Xi arrived
in India on Wednesday for a three-day visit and was greeted by Modi, who was
celebrating his 64th birthday in his home state of Gujarat. The visit will
focus on economic and trade ties and Chinese investment in infrastructure.
Dozens of
soldiers from both sides have faced off in the uninhabited Lakakh region for
over a week, Reuters news agency reported.
A border
was never clearly defined in the vastly uninhabited Himalayan region that
separates the two nuclear-armed neighbors. Conflicts there have been counted as
the highest in the world. A brief war was fought over the border in 1962. The
Actual Line of Control (ALC) was established in the 1990s in a bid to end that
dispute.



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