Tag: China

  • China could be behind second wave of COVID-19 in India: BJP leader Kailash Vijayvargiya

    By PTI
    INDORE: BJP General Secretary Kailash Vijayvargiya has said it is a “matter of discussion” if the second wave of COVID-19 in India was an outbreak or China had a hand in it.

    A video of Vijayvargiya’s speech at a function here went viral on Tuesday.

    “There is a second wave of COVID-19. It was an outbreak, or was it sent? It is a matter of discussion, because if any country in the world has challenged China, it is India…Prime Minister Narendra Modi has challenged (China),” the BJP leader is heard saying in the video.

    “We think this is a viral `war’ by China to harass our country, because the second wave of COVID-19 was reported only in India and not in neighbouring countries like Bangladesh, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Bhutan and Afghanistan,” he said, speaking in Hindi.

    It could not be ascertained if he said ‘war’ or ‘vaar’ which means `blow/attack’ in Hindi.

    While the BJP leader could not be contacted for comment, some witnesses said he made these statements at an event organized by a trust to distribute oxygen concentrators on Monday.

    Opposition Congress said he should clarify what he wanted to say.

    “Does Vijayvargiya want to say that China has waged a biological war against India? He holds a responsible position in the BJP and he should make clear the intent behind his statement,” state Congress spokesperson Neelabh Shukla said.

    The negligence of the BJP-led Union government was responsible for the second wave, he alleged.

  • India needs to restore deterrence to stop China from attempting to nibble at LAC: Ex-NSA Shivshankar Menon

    By PTI
    NEW DELHI: India needs to restore deterrence if it wants to stop China from attempting to nibble at the Line of Actual Control (LAC) and changing its status quo, noted strategic affairs expert and former National Security Adviser and foreign secretary Shivshankar Menon said on Saturday.

    In an online discussion, he said making noises or building some international coalition in response to what China has been doing will be ineffective and India needs to strengthen itself along the LAC to make sure that the neighbouring country is not able to change the situation in its favour.

    “The answer is not making noise or building some international coalition or passing resolution at the UN. To my mind (it) is ineffective. If you want to stop them from nibbling at the LAC and changing the status quo, you need to restore deterrence which we did partially around Pangong in August. You need to restore it across the line,” he said.

    Menon, whose book ‘India and Asian Geopolitics: Past, Present and Future’ has just been released, was replying to a question at the discussion organised by the Indian Women’s Press Corps.

    He also called for a broader vision of India’s relationship with China.

    “If we are saying peace and tranquillity is an essential condition for the rest of the relationship, then how do you explain the fact that in 2020, China again became your biggest trading partner overtaking the US which has been your number one trading partner in 2019.

    How do you explain the first quarter of this year, where trade has boomed between you and China, maybe because of medical supplies and the outrageous prices they are charging, whatever it is,” Menon said.

    The former NSA also said that problem arises when attempts are made to spin the issues.

    “The problem is when we start spinning these issues when we play them for domestic politics when we start telling lies about what is happening, what is not happening. Then you cannot deal with it effectively on the ground. Then it becomes very difficult,” he said.

    He said there was a need to think about how far India can economically decouple itself from China and what it is going to do to strengthen itself on the LAC to make sure that China cannot keep changing the situation in its favour whenever it suits it.

    Asked whether the perception of India’s mishandling of the second wave of the coronavirus crisis will have an impact on its image, Menon said it was not possible now to gauge if there would be any long-term impact.

    “I do not know about the long-term impact. I do not think we can say anything yet. But it certainly means that people will not rely on you to some extent,” he said.

    On what should be India’s foreign policy priorities, Menon said it must focus on consolidating relations with countries in the neighbourhood as also in the Indian Ocean region which included Southeast Asian nations.

    “You have to be much more with your neighbours, especially when the world is getting more and more chaotic, more and more fractious, much more difficult,” he said.

    In that context, he also mentioned that walking away from the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP) was a “huge mistake” by India.

    In November 2019, India pulled out of the RCEP over unresolved core concerns saying the pact in its current form would have an adverse impact on the lives and livelihoods of all Indians.

    “So this idea that we can cut off from the word and we are a world unto ourselves; we have so much demand at home and we will run ourselves; for me, that’s crazy thinking,” Menon said, adding there could have been many ways to deal with the issue.

    To a question, whether domestic politics was driving foreign policy he suggested that it has been the case always.

    “If you have a domestic politics which is clear about the kind of India you want and the kind of world you want to enable that India; then it is much easier to deal with the world and the world also knows what to do with you,” he said.

    “They also know what to expect from you and at least for a very long time, we had a very clear view where democracy we were building as a secular, modern democratic country of our own and that is what we would like the world to be a democratic place where laws applied, which is peaceful, and therefore, enabled the rise of India,” Menon said.

    He said India was a very active participant in the international processes and that it had a very clear view of its role in the world and what kind of world it wanted.

    The former foreign secretary also cited examples of how neighbouring countries like Nepal and Sri Lanka looked up to India in drawing inspiration.

    “That’s stopped; why, because you are not clear what kind of India you are building up.

    You are busy arguing about that among yourselves.

    And the India that they see some people are arguing for in India is not very attractive to your own neighbours.

    So the power of example today no longer works.

    “So, it is not just, oh, we dragged domestic politics into our foreign policy, it is the kind of domestic politics we have dragged into our foreign policy that makes the trouble,” he said.

    Asked about the escalation in the conflict between Israel and Palestine, he said the problem is that Israeli politics were in a very complicated state.

    He said there is a real risk of further deterioration of the ground situation because of the nature of Israeli politics with the ambition of individual politicians wanting to look more heroic than their rivals.

    On the Quad or Quadrilateral coalition comprising India, the US, Australia and Japan, Menon said New Delhi has significant interests in ensuring freedom of navigation in the South China Sea and it must seize the available options considering its strategic interests.

    He said if the Quad serves some of India’s interests, then it should go for it.

  • India may overtake China as most populous country sooner than UN projections of 2027: Report

    India is expected to add nearly 273 million people to its population between now and 2050, a UN report said in 2019.

  • Did China manufacture Coronavirus as a man-made bioweapon?

    Since the covid-19 virus have struck the world, many theories have come out that the virus was created in a particular country as a biological weapon. Now, Chinese military scientists allegedly investigated weaponising coronaviruses five years before the COVID-19 pandemic and may have predicted a World War III fought with biological weapon.

    A document written by Chinese scientists and health officials before the pandemic in 2015 states that SARS coronaviruses were a “new era of genetic weapons” that could be “artificially manipulated into an emerging human disease virus, then weaponised and unleashed, reported Weekend Australian.

    Peter Jennings, the executive director of the Australian Strategic Policy Institute (ASPI), told news.com.au that the document is as close to a “smoking gun” as we’ve got.

    The paper titled The Unnatural Origin of SARS and New Species of Man-Made Viruses as Genetic Bioweapons suggested that World War Three would be fought with biological weapons. The document revealed that Chinese military scientists were discussing the weaponisation of SARS coronaviruses five years before the COVID-19 pandemic. The report by Weekend Australian was published in news.com.au.

  • India’s relation with China has enormous possibilities, significant challenges, says Jaishankar

    India’s relation with China has enormous possibilities as well as significant challenges, said External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar on Thursday, adding that a relationship can be developed “if it is free of tension and friction”.

    Speaking at an event ‘Policy Exchange’ in London, he said: “Our relation with China has enormous possibilities, it also has significant challenges. I am afraid some of those challenges are on display right now. It is common sense that you can develop a relationship if it is free of tension and friction, if not actually coercion and conflict.”
    He pointed out that at this time, a very large Chinese military massing of forces close to border areas of India, which has impacted growth of the relationship between the two countries.

    At this time, we have a very large Chinese military massing of forces close to our border areas. That has impacted growth of the relationship. As I said there are possibilities but even if those possibilities are to be realised, it has to be done on basis of mutual respect.”

    On Wednesday, Jaishankar, while speaking at a Global Dialogue Series event, had said that India’s relationship with China is going through a “very difficult phase” and New Delhi has made it clear to Beijing that peace and tranquillity on the border is “absolutely essential” for good relations.

    “The relationship is going through a very difficult phase because in violation of agreements and understandings of many years, the Chinese have deployed a very large part of the military on/close to Line of Actual Control (LAC) without explanation.”

    “We have been very clear with the Chinese that peace and tranquillity on the border and border areas is absolutely essential to the development of our relationship. One cannot have friction, bloodshed, intimidation on the borders and then say let’s have a good relationship in other domains,” he had said.

  • China censors Oscars success of history-making director Chloe Zhao

    By AFP
    BEIJING: Beijing-born Chloe Zhao was scrubbed from Chinese social media on Monday as a nationalist backlash airbrushed out her remarkable achievement of becoming the first woman of colour to win the best director Oscar.

    Zhao on Sunday night became the second woman ever to win the coveted award at the Oscars, as her film “Nomadland” — about marginalised Americans roaming the west — bagged best picture and its lead, Frances McDormand, won best actress.

    But all recent posts containing her name and “Nomadland” were mysteriously wiped from the Twitter-like site Weibo by Monday noon Beijing time.

    Her win was also met with silence by Chinese media.

    Initially hailed by state media for her film’s success at the Golden Globes in March, Zhao became the target of a nationalist backlash after social media users dug up years-old interviews in which she appeared to criticise her country of birth.

    Chinese cinemas abruptly pulled the film’s scheduled release.

    This year’s Oscars were also not aired on Chinese television or streaming channels.

    Zhao appeared to allude to these difficulties in her Oscars acceptance speech, saying, “I’ve been thinking a lot lately of how I keep going when things get hard.”

    ALSO READ: Here’s the complete list of winners at 93rd Oscars

    She also quoted a line from a Classical Chinese poem that translates to “people are fundamentally good at birth” — a move praised by many Chinese social media users, before the posts were deleted.

    Weibo was initially flooded with posts praising Zhao on Monday morning, while others decried censorship.

    “Chloe Zhao becomes the first Asian diaspora/Chinese female filmmaker to win the best director Oscar in history,” wrote an entertainment blogger with more than 8.9 million followers, in a post that gained thousands of likes before it was deleted.

    “China’s public opinion control is outrageous. After Chloe Zhao’s starling Oscars win, there is not even a fart on Weibo,” wrote an outraged user.

    Despite the censors’ efforts, on the streets of Beijing, pride in an Asian director reaching the apogee of US cinema was easy to find.

    “She’s the pride of Chinese people… it’s very rare for a Chinese to get an Oscar award,” Yan Ying, a female engineer, told AFP on Monday morning.

    “I think Chinese movies will get better and better and she will set a very good example for Chinese mainland directors,” said 38-year-old legal worker Yuan Min.

    Zhao is also well-known in China as the stepdaughter of famous actress Song Dandan.

  • National security jeopardised by govt’s wasteful talks: Rahul Gandhi on China

    By PTI
    NEW DELHI: Congress leader Rahul Gandhi on Monday accused the government of jeopardising India’s national security, and termed its talks with China as “wasteful”.

    “Chinese occupation of Gogra-Hot Springs and Depsang plains is a direct threat to India’s strategic interests including the DBO airstrip,” he said on Twitter “National security massively jeopardised by GOI’s wasteful talks. Our nation deserves better,” he said.

    His remarks come after reports that China has refused to pull back its troops from Hot Springs, Gogra and Depsang in eastern Ladakh.

    ALSO READ: ‘Standoff in Ladakh is for long haul, no de-escalation in sight’

    The Congress on Sunday asked the government to explain why disengagement talks with China have “not yielded results” in other friction points in eastern Ladakh.

    Citing media reports about China’s refusal to withdraw its troops, senior Congress spokesperson Ajay Maken asked the government to come clean on the issue.

    “Why has the disengagement talks as promised by the Defence Minister on remaining friction points not yielded any results for India,” he said.

    There has been no visible forward movement at the latest round of military talks between the two countries early this month.

    The Indian Army had said in a statement that both sides held a detailed deliberation on disengagement of troops in the remaining friction points of Hot Springs, Gogra and Depsang in eastern Ladakh and agreed to jointly maintain stability on the ground, avoid any new incidents and resolve outstanding issues in an “expeditious manner”.

  • ‘Standoff in Ladakh is for long haul, no de-escalation in sight’

    Express News Service
    NEW DELHI:  The deployment of the Indian and the Chinese troops at the Line of Actual Control (LAC) in Eastern Ladakh is unlikely to ease in the near future as there is no pressure on the Chinese to disengage, believe defence experts.

    There are around 50,000 troops with arms and equipment, including the armoured vehicle, artillery guns and missiles, deployed along the LAC in a tense standoff which even saw deadly clashes. Lt Gen DS Hooda (Retd) says, “I don’t see an early resolution to the standoff because the kind of messaging from the Chinese side doesn’t seem to indicate that they are in hurry.” General Hooda commanded the Northern Command under which the 14 Corps looking after the Eastern Ladakh functions.

    Going by the official statements, both sides have fallen back to usual statements since the disengagement of troops from both sides completed from the North and South Banks of Pangong Tso Lake.  The disengagement also included the heights of Kailash Ranges which were occupied by the Indian Army on June 27, 2020, thus acquiring advantageous positions opposite the Moldo Garrison of the Chinese People’s Liberation Army.

    Till now, 11 rounds of talks between the Corps Commanders of India and China have taken place.Maj Gen SB Asthana (Retd.), defence analyst, says, “Traditionally these months of the year is the campaigning season and, in this season, buildup normally takes place which is not going to fade away. No side will take a chance.”

    The other thing is that the terrain for the Chinese is conducive as the plateau is on their side. Lt Gen Vinod Bhatia (Retd.) said, “It’s a game of patience and going to be a long haul. We have done well at tactical, operational, strategic level so far. We will also not be escalating but won’t put our guards down.”

  • Hong Kong media tycoon Jimmy Lai given additional jail term, will serve 14 months

    By AFP
    HONG KONG: Hong Kong media tycoon Jimmy Lai was handed an additional jail term on Friday for his involvement in huge democracy rallies, meaning he will serve a total of 14 months in prison.

    Lai was initially sentenced on Friday to 12 months in jail for organising one rally, then to another eight months for his participation in a different anti-government protest. However, he will only serve 14 months as part of the jail terms will be served concurrently.

    The latest sentencing was linked to a rally on August 31, 2019 marking the fifth anniversary of Beijing’s rejection of a call for universal suffrage for Hong Kong, which sparked the 79-day “Umbrella Movement”.

    The rally descended into city-wide chaos as police clashed with pro-democracy protesters.

    Alongside Lai, former lawmaker Lee Cheuk-yan was sentenced to six months in jail, while another veteran democrat Yeung Sum received a suspended sentence.

     Among the other defendants was Martin Lee, 82, a respected barrister known as the “father of democracy” in Hong Kong, who was once chosen by Beijing to help write the city’s mini-constitution.

    They also included Margaret Ng, a 73-year-old barrister and former opposition lawmaker.

    Lee and Ng were given prison terms, but their sentences were suspended. 

    The rallies in 2019 often descended into clashes between riot police and a knot of hardcore participants, and posed the most concerted challenge to China’s rule since the former British colony’s 1997 handover.

    But China and the city government successfully silenced the democracy movement with a sweeping crackdown featuring a national security law that criminalises dissent.

    They have also pressed a radical overhaul of the city’s electoral system to ensure only “patriots” are members of the legislature.

    Amnesty International Asia-Pacific regional director Yamini Mishra said Friday’s sentencings highlighted the government’s determination to eliminate all opposition.

    “Having arrested the majority of Hong Kong’s most prominent dissidents using the repressive national security law, the authorities are now mopping up remaining peaceful critics under the pretext of bogus charges related to the 2019 protests,” Mishra said.

    Before delivering the sentences, judge Amanda Woodcock said the rally was “premeditated” to “circumvent” a police ban. 

    She also said the fact the rally was peaceful was no defence.

    “The Basic Law guarantees freedom of assembly and procession however these rights are not absolute and are subject to restrictions,” Woodcock said.

    – Defiance -Supporters of the defendants rose and waved to the nine in court as they were taken away after the sentencing.

    “Support you until the last,” the supporters chanted.

    In comments to the court before the sentencing, Ng maintained a defiant tone.

    “There is no right so precious to the people of Hong Kong as the freedom of expression and the freedom of peaceful assembly,” said Ng, who discharged her legal team and gave her statement in person. 

    She added that she was prepared to stand with and stand up for the people who “in the last resort, had to give collective expression of their anguish and urge the government to respond”.

    “I stand the law’s good servant but the people’s first,” said Ng, whose submission ended with a round of loud applause in the courtroom. 

    “I’m ready for the sentencing and I’m proud that I can walk with the people of HK in this road for democracy,” former lawmaker Lee Cheuk-yan said outside court ahead of the hearing.

    “We’ll walk together through the storm even in darkness.”

    Lee was sentenced to 12 months in jail.

    Lee and Jimmy Lai had pleaded guilty to taking part in another illegal assembly on August 31, 2019. 

    The maximum penalty is five years in prison and the sentencings are also expected to be delivered on Friday afternoon. 

  • China capable of launching cyber attacks on India; focusing on cyber defence: CDS Bipin Rawat

    Gen Rawat said that a quot;capability differential quot; has come between the two countries over the years and that China has a quot;lead quot; over India on technology.