India, China move to hold joint military exercises

By IRNA,

New Delhi : Months after suspending the high-level defence exchanges, India appears to be moving to resume military exercises with China as indications emerged Tuesday that the two countries could be holding joint exercises in the near future.


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The indications emerged on the eve of the meeting between Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and Chinese President Hu Jintao in Sanya and amid apparent Chinese moves to reverse its two-year-old policy of granting stapled visas to Indian nationals hailing from Jammu and Kashmir.

‘The joint exercises would be held,’ pti said.

It said that some level of defence contact like border flag meeting had always been maintained even after high-level military exchanges were suspended after the Northern Army Commander Lt Gen B S Jaswal was given a visa on a loose sheet because he was serving in the state.

On the stapled visa issue, the sources noted that there was some movement but India will have to wait and watch how things evolve.

They said the two countries will have to work quietly on this without making any announcements.

China had in 2008 started the practice of issuing visas on loose sheets of paper to people from Jammu and Kashmir, which was seen here as questioning India’s sovereignty over the state.

This had been an irritant in bilateral relations and the matter had snowballed into a major controversy last July after the Jaswal episode.

The Prime Minister had taken up the stapled visa issue with Chinese President Hu Jintao in Vietnam in October last year when they had met on the sidelines of ASEAN Summit.

The issue was again raised in December with Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao when he visited here.

Political and economic relations between India and China had been growing and that the borders were also calm.

On the building of infrastructure by China along its borders with India, India was also doing so on its side of the border to catch up with its eastern neighbours.

Some 78 road projects were expected to be completed by India by 2012 and all but eight would be finished on time. The remaining eight will take a little longer.

Singh and Hu will meet in Sanya tomorrow and are expected to discuss ways to develop bilateral relations.

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