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Let us make it a friendly border, says Narayanan
By C. Raja Mohan
BEIJING, MAY 30. Declaring that cooperation between India and
China is ``a historic necessity'', the President, Mr. K.R.
Narayanan, urged the two nations to overcome differences and make
their border a peaceful and friendly one.
Conveying a new sense of Indian urgency on the resolution of the
boundary dispute with China has become one of the principal
diplomatic tasks of Mr. Narayanan who is here on a week-long
state visit.
He had pressed the point on Monday with the Chinese President,
Mr. Jiang Zemin. In his address today to the students and faculty
of the prestigious Peking University, Mr. Narayanan returned to
the theme. He argued that India and China ``should persevere in
our joint efforts to seek a fair, reasonable and mutually
acceptable settlement of the boundary question within the
framework of national interests and sentiments of both our
peoples''.
As Sino-Indian talks on the dispute meandered over the years, the
Government has been signalling Beijing that it desires a more
purposeful and result-oriented negotiations on the clarification
of the Line of Actual Control that separates the two nations.
India hopes that a clarification of the alignment of the LAC,
which is itself in contention in many places would help both
sides to begin addressing the more fundamental dispute over the
boundary.
A meeting earlier this month in New Delhi of the Sino- Indian
Joint Working Group had agreed that experts from both sides will
meet more frequently in an attempt to expedite the negotiations.
Mr. Narayanan is now making the Indian case, both publicly and in
his conversations with the top Chinese leadership, for more
productive talks on the dispute.
Echoing the sentiments expressed by the late Chinese leader, Deng
Xiaoping, Mr. Narayanan was insisting that Asia would not realise
her destiny unless India and China learnt to cooperate and
prosper. ``That is why,'' Mr. Narayanan said, ``I hold that in
the new century cooperation between India and China is a
historical necessity''.
Reiterating India's commitment to develop good relations with all
its her neighbours, Mr. Narayanan said it was inevitable that
there would be ``some differences'' between India and China.
Calling for the political will to resolve the dispute, Mr.
Narayanan said India and China ``should strive together to make
the border one of eternal peace, friendship and cooperation''.
The boundary question also came up in Mr. Narayanan's meeting
with Mr. Li Peng, who was a former Prime Minister of China and
currently the Chairman of the Chinese parliament, the National
Peoples Congress.
Mr. Jiang had suggested on Monday that both ``time'' and
``patience'' were needed in resolving the long-standing boundary
dispute. Mr. Li Peng today is believed to have told Mr. Narayanan
that ``substantive work'' remained to be done before the dispute
was resolved.
The Indian message on the importance of an early resolution of
the dispute appears to be getting through. Whether there is an
immediate shift in the Chinese negotiating position or not,
Indian officials are indeed optimistic after Mr. Narayanan's
consultations with the Chinese leadership in the last couple of
days.
The positive tone of Mr. Narayanan's talks with Mr. Jiang and Mr.
Li, Indian sources believe, signal a possible Chinese recognition
of the need for a change of attitude on the border question in
the context of the search for a more cooperative relationship
between the two Asian giants.
The President had a productive meeting with Mr. Li Ruihuan, head
of the Chinese Peoples Political Consultative Committee, and will
continue the discussion tomorrow with the Prime Minister, Mr. Zhu
Rongji.
There is a quiet satisfaction on the Indian side that Mr.
Narayanan's meetings have gone off well, and a similar assessment
is being signalled by his Chinese interlocutors.
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