China says India’s Kashmir move ‘unacceptable’, undermines its territorial sovereignty
Diplomacy

China says India’s Kashmir move ‘unacceptable’, undermines its territorial sovereignty

China was critical of the impact of India’s actions on the mainly Buddhist region of Ladakh, an area of strategic importance nestled between Tibet and Pakistan.

   
Border Road Organisation board in Ladakh

Border Road Organisation board in Ladakh (representational image) | Commons

New Delhi: Beijing has criticised India’s decision to change the status of Jammu & Kashmir, a state that borders China, accusing New Delhi of undermining its territorial sovereignty.

China’s statement was most critical of the impact of India’s actions on the mainly Buddhist region of Ladakh ⁠— an area of strategic importance nestled between Tibet and Pakistan.

Just two years after India and China’s decades-long dispute flared up over a remote area of the Himalayas, Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s surprise move on Kashmir has inflamed tensions yet again. Pakistan has also launched a diplomatic protest while its army pledged to go to “any extent’’ to oppose Modi’s decision.


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Beijing has always opposed India’s inclusion of Chinese territory in the western section of the China-India border, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswomen Hua Chunying said in a statement Tuesday.

“The recent unilateral revision of domestic laws by the Indian side continues to undermine China’s territorial sovereignty, which is unacceptable and will not have any effect,” Hua said.

India’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs did not immediately respond to phone calls and messages requesting comment.

China is seriously concerned about the current situation in Kashmir, Hua added.

“We call on India and Pakistan to peacefully resolve relevant disputes through dialogue,” she said, noting China had urged India to “avoid any move that further complicates the border issue.”

India and China have long had border disputes in Ladakh, which was made a federally administered region along with the move to remove the special status to Kashmir in parliament on Monday. A two-week standoff ensued in September 2014 when Chinese troops advanced several kilometers into northern Ladakh.

— With assistance from Dandan Li and Archana Chaudhary.


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