logo
India's Modi meets China's top diplomat Wang as Asian powers rebuild ties

India's Modi meets China's top diplomat Wang as Asian powers rebuild ties

Al Jazeera11 hours ago
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi has met China's top diplomat Wang Yi and hailed the 'steady progress' made in improving the bilateral relationship after a years-long standoff between the nuclear-armed Asian powers and as the two nations navigate a shifting global economy upended by United States President Donald Trump's tariffs.
Modi also noted 'respect for each other's interests and sensitiveness' in a statement on social media after meeting Chinese Foreign Minister Wang in New Delhi on Tuesday. China's Ministry of Foreign Affairs said the countries have entered a 'steady development track' and the countries should 'trust and support' each other.
Glad to meet Foreign Minister Wang Yi. Since my meeting with President Xi in Kazan last year, India-China relations have made steady progress guided by respect for each other's interests and sensitivities. I look forward to our next meeting in Tianjin on the sidelines of the SCO… pic.twitter.com/FyQI6GqYKC
— Narendra Modi (@narendramodi) August 19, 2025
Wang arrived in India on Monday and has met with Foreign Affairs Minister Subrahmanyam Jaishankar as well as National Security Adviser Ajit Doval about the countries' disputed border in the Himalayan mountains.
India's Ministry of External Affairs said Wang's meeting with Doval discussed 'deescalation, delimitation and boundary affairs'.
Relations plummeted in 2020 after security forces clashed along the border. The violence, the worst in decades, left 20 Indian soldiers and four Chinese soldiers dead, freezing high-level political engagements.
'The setbacks we experienced in the past few years were not in the interest of the people of our two countries. We are heartened to see the stability that is now restored in the borders,' Wang said Monday.
Modi emphasised the importance of maintaining peace and tranquillity on the border and reiterated India's commitment to a 'fair, reasonable and mutually acceptable resolution of the boundary question,' his office said in a statement.
'Political compromise'
The rebuilding of India-China ties coincides with friction between New Delhi and Washington after United States President Donald Trump imposed steep tariffs on India for continuing to buy Russian oil, which the US says is fuelling Moscow's war machine.
India is a longtime US ally seen as a counterbalance against China's influence in Asia and is part of the Quad security alliance with the US, along with Australia and Japan.
The chill in relations after the deadly clash in 2020 between troops in the Ladakh region affected trade, diplomacy and air travel, as both sides deployed tens of thousands of security forces in border areas.
Some progress has been made since then.
Last year, India and China agreed to a pact on border patrols and withdrew additional forces along some border areas. Both countries continue to fortify their border by building roads and rail networks.
In recent months, the countries have increased official visits and discussed easing some trade restrictions, movement of citizens and visas for businesspeople.
In June, Beijing allowed pilgrims from India to visit holy sites in Tibet. Both sides are working to restore direct flights.
Last week, the spokesman for India's Foreign Ministry, Randhir Jaiswal, said India and China were in discussions to restart trade through three points along their 3,488km (2,167-mile) border.
'Settling the boundary issue between the two countries requires political compromise at the highest political level,' said Manoj Joshi, a fellow at the Observer Research Foundation, a New Delhi-based think tank.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

‘Sitting on a volcano': Two Indian temples clash as politics and faith mix
‘Sitting on a volcano': Two Indian temples clash as politics and faith mix

Al Jazeera

timean hour ago

  • Al Jazeera

‘Sitting on a volcano': Two Indian temples clash as politics and faith mix

Digha, India – On a hot and sultry June afternoon, Mamata Banerjee, the chief minister of India's West Bengal state, swept a sun-scorched road to make way for a towering chariot in Digha, a tourist town on the country's Bay of Bengal coast. The moment, captured by dozens of cameras and broadcast widely on television, on June 27, marked the launch of the eastern state's first-ever government-sponsored Rath Yatra ('chariot festival') to celebrate the construction of a sprawling temple complex built to house the Hindu god, Lord Jagannath. First announced in December 2018, and completed in May this year, the Digha temple has been pitched by Banerjee and her governing Trinamool Congress (TMC) party as West Bengal's alternative to the more popular Jagannath Temple in neighbouring Odisha state's Puri town, about 350km (217 miles) away. Built in the 12th century, the temple in Puri is one of Hinduism's four major pilgrimage sites, and home to an annual 800-year-old chariot festival, a weeklong event attended by tens of thousands of devotees. To kick-start the festival, descendants of the erstwhile Puri kingdom's rulers symbolically sweep the chariot path, like their ancestors in power once did. At Digha, that task was performed by Banerjee, neither the descendant of an emperor, nor a priest, raising questions about whether the construction of the temple was about faith or politics, a year before one of India's most politically significant states votes for its next government. Move aimed to counter BJP? West Bengal, home to more than 91 million people, is India's fourth most-populous state. Nearly 30 percent of its population is Muslim. For decades, the state was also home to the world's longest-serving elected communist government, until a feisty Banerjee – leading the centrist TMC party she founded in 1998 – unseated the Left Front coalition in 2011. Since then, it is the Hindu majoritarian Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), led by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, that has emerged as the TMC's main rival in West Bengal. From winning just two parliamentary seats in 2014, the year Modi stormed to power, the BJP last year won 12 of the state's 42 seats. The TMC won 29. In the 2021 state assembly election, Banerjee's TMC and its allies won a landslide 216 of 292 seats, while the BJP-led coalition won 77. It was also the first election in which the Left or the Indian National Congress, the main opposition in parliament, could not win a single seat in a state both had previously governed. As the political landscape changed in West Bengal, so did its players. For almost a decade now, the BJP and its ideological parent, the far-right Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), have used Hindu festivals such as Ram Navami to expand their footprint in the state, often organising large processions that have on occasion passed, provocatively, through areas with large Muslim populations, with participants carried sticks, swords and tridents. The BJP has also repeatedly accused the TMC of 'minority appeasement', in essence alleging that the party favours Muslim interests over the concerns of Hindu voters. The TMC appears to be responding to that shift in politics in kind. In recent rallies, its leaders have been seen chanting 'Jai Jagannath' (Hail Jagannath) to counter the BJP's 'Jai Shri Ram' (Hail Lord Ram), a slogan that, for millions of Hindus in India, is more a war-cry against Muslims and other minorities than a political chant. 'Now no one will say Jai Shri Ram. Everyone will say Jai Jagannath,' TMC leader Arup Biswas said in Digha in April. To political scientist Ranabir Samaddar, the TMC's temple politics is evidence of a brewing battle over the identity of Hinduism itself. 'If you agree Hindu society is not monolithic, then it's natural that Hindus who reject the majoritarian version will assert a different understanding,' said Samaddar, who is a distinguished chair in migration and forced migration studies at the Mahanirban Calcutta Research Group. He argued that moves like Mamata's represent a deeper social and cultural contest. 'This is not a simple secularism-versus-communalism binary,' he said. 'It is a protest against the idea that there is only one kind of Hinduism.' For years, the BJP's political opponents have struggled to craft a response to its vision of creating a Hindu-first state without being put on the defensive by Modi's party, which portrays them as intrinsically anti-Hindu. The Digha temple, Samaddar suggested, attempts to break that BJP stranglehold. 'As the dominant narrative becomes more rigid, insisting on a singular, state-aligned Hindu identity, the counter-response is also happening within the framework of Hindu identity,' he said. 'It's a dialogue, a form of social argument about plurality. 'This is also an assertion of rights. A claim to say, 'We too are Hindus, but we won't let you define what Hinduism is.' These are attempts to break the monopoly of certain institutions and groups who have long claimed to speak for all Hindus. That's what makes this moment significant.' Bengal's shifting religious terrain Originally introduced by the government as a 'cultural centre', the Digha shrine soon evolved into a 65-metre-tall (213 feet) temple, spread over 8 hectares (20 acres) and costing the state exchequer more than $30m. 'This temple will add a new feather to the state's cap. Digha will grow into an international tourist attraction. This will serve as a place of harmony. The sea adds a special charm to Digha. If it becomes a place of pilgrimage, more tourists will come,' Trinamool chief Banerjee had said during the structure's inauguration on April 30. She will seek a fourth straight term as chief minister next year. But the project has faced pushback. When the Digha temple opened earlier this year, the BJP's parliamentarian from Puri, Sambit Patra, declared: 'There is only one Jagannath Dham in the world, and it is in Puri.' A dham is a shrine in Sanskrit. On June 27, the BJP's most prominent Bengal leader, Suvendu Adhikari, called the temple a 'tourist attraction, not a spiritual site'. 'Puri Dham will remain Puri Dham. Mamata Banerjee is a fake Hindu. Temples can't be built using government funds. It is a cultural centre, not a temple. Don't mislead the people of Bengal,' he said. He argued that Hindu temples in independent India have been made using donations – including the Ram temple in the northern Indian city of Ayodhya, built on the ruins of the 16th-century Babri Mosque that Hindu zealots had torn down in 1992. 'Hindus make temples on their own. No government fund was used to build the Ram temple. Hindus across the world funded it.' Priests at the Puri temple were furious too. The temple's chief servitor, Bhabani Das Mohapatra, called the Digha complex a 'crime by Mamata Banerjee', and accused the West Bengal state government of 'arrogantly violating scriptural norms'. Ramakrishna Das Mahapatra, a senior servitor from Puri who attended the Digha consecration, was suspended by the Puri temple authority. 'Nobody invited us' The criticism of the Digha temple is not limited to political opponents and representatives of the Digha temple. As hundreds of people watched the June 27 consecration from behind security barricades, a 64-year-old local and retired government employee, Manik Sarkar, said he was frustrated. 'All the cost is coming from taxpayers like us,' he told Al Jazeera. 'But nobody invited us. The government hospital nearby doesn't even have proper equipment, and they're spending millions lighting up the temple.' Another resident, Ashima Devi, said she was anxious about the daily electricity bills. 'Lakhs of rupees, every night,' she said. 'Unemployment is already so high here. Thousands of government school teachers who lost their jobs because of corruption – they had cleared the exams fairly. Why isn't this government fixing that? What will happen to them?' She was referring to a $70m public school hiring scam recently unearthed by India's top financial crimes office, the Enforcement Directorate, for which the TMC's former education minister is now jailed. One man in the crowd, who called himself a TMC supporter, interjected. 'Tourism will grow,' he said. But Sarkar pushed back: 'All the hotels [in Digha] are owned by outsiders. What benefit are you talking about?' 'A politics that centres temples' Historian Tapati Guha Thakurta said that the state's involvement in temple building ought to be seen as a part of a larger arc in India's modern journey. 'There's been a major slide – from the modern, secular model to a politics that centres temples,' she said. After India's independence, the state actively supported projects like the reconstruction of the Somnath temple in Gujarat, backed by leaders like Vallabhbhai Patel — the man credited with bringing together 500 princely states into the Indian union using a mix of allurement and coercion. But independent India's first prime minister, Jawaharlal Nehru, opposed state support for the Somnath rebuilding, she noted. 'He stayed away. That moment showed how contested religion was, even within the Nehruvian vision of the state,' Guha Thakurta said to Al Jazeera. 'That moment was emblematic. It showed that even at the dawn of Indian secularism, religion was never fully out of the frame.' Nawsad Siddique, the sole state legislator from the Indian Secular Front, a coalition of the opposition Left groups and Congress party, called the Digha temple a 'blurring of governance and faith'. Speaking to reporters on July 10, in Kolkata, he said, 'We don't have jobs. Our youth are migrating. Our schools are crumbling. And we're building mega temples?' Guha Thakurta recalled the deliberate separation of state and religion under 34 years of Left government. 'Our generation grew up under a firewall between religion and the state,' said Guha Thakurta, whose research into Durga Puja – the celebration of Goddess Durga that is the pre-eminent annual festival for Bengalis – helped secure a UNESCO intangible cultural heritage tag for the festival. At the time, Marxist cultural elites dismissed even Durga Puja as 'opo-sanskriti' or a degenerate ritual, to be merely tolerated. That changed post-2011, when Banerjee first came to power. 'From $100 in grants, it's now $1,200,' she said, referring to state funds for Durga Puja committees. 'Durga Puja is now a state event. And this model is spreading.' 'We're sitting on a volcano about to erupt. That's all I'll say.'

China to unveil advanced weapons at huge military parade to mark WWII end
China to unveil advanced weapons at huge military parade to mark WWII end

Al Jazeera

timean hour ago

  • Al Jazeera

China to unveil advanced weapons at huge military parade to mark WWII end

China will stage a massive military parade next month in the heart of Beijing to commemorate 80 years since the end of World War II, and to showcase new Chinese weaponry that will be 'displayed to the outside world for the first time', state media report. Hundreds of People's Liberation Army (PLA) aircraft, including fighter jets and bombers as well as ground forces with the latest military equipment, will be featured in the parade, Chinese military officials said at a news conference on Wednesday. China's official Xinhua news agency said the military parade and 'joint armament formations… will be organised in a manner reflecting their functions in real combat', and will include air, land and sea combat groups. 'The military parade will feature new fourth-generation equipment as the core, including advanced tanks, carrier-based aircraft and fighter jets, organised into operational modules to demonstrate Chinese military's system-based combat capability,' China's state-affiliated Global Times media outlet reported. 'All the weaponry and equipment on display in this military parade are domestically produced active-duty main battle equipment. This event showcases a concentrated display of the new generation of weaponry and equipment of the Chinese military,' the Global Times added. The September 3 event will be the second parade since 2015 to mark the formal surrender of Japanese forces in 1945. Foreign military attaches and security analysts told the Reuters news agency that they were expecting China's military to display a host of new weaponry and equipment at the parade, including military trucks fitted with devices to take out drones, new tanks and early warning aircraft to protect China's aircraft carriers. The United States and its allies will be closely watching the display of military might, particularly for China's expanding arsenal of missiles, especially antiship missile systems and weapons with hypersonic capabilities. The 'Victory Day' parade, involving 45 contingents of troops, will take about 70 minutes to file past President President Xi Jinping in Beijing's Tiananmen Square. The Chinese leader will be accompanied by a number of invited foreign leaders and dignitaries, including Russian President Vladimir Putin, who also attended the last anniversary parade in 2015. Chinese authorities have stepped up security in downtown Beijing since early August, when the first large-scale parade rehearsal was held, setting up checkpoints, diverting road traffic and shutting shopping malls and office buildings.

N Korea says S Korea ‘cannot be a diplomatic partner' as US drills continue
N Korea says S Korea ‘cannot be a diplomatic partner' as US drills continue

Al Jazeera

time4 hours ago

  • Al Jazeera

N Korea says S Korea ‘cannot be a diplomatic partner' as US drills continue

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un's sister has again dismissed peace overtures from South Korean President Lee Jae-myung, declaring that Pyongyang will never see Seoul as a partner for diplomacy, according to state media. The report by KCNA on Wednesday came as South Korea and its ally, the United States, continued their joint military drills, which includes testing an upgraded response to North Korea's growing nuclear capabilities. Kim Yo Jong, who is among her brother's top foreign policy officials, denounced the exercises as a 'reckless' invasion rehearsal, according to KCNA, and said that Lee had a 'dual personality' by talking about wanting to pursue peace while continuing the war games. She made the comments during a meeting on Tuesday with senior Foreign Ministry officials about her brother's diplomatic strategies in the face of persistent threats from rivals and a rapidly shifting geopolitical landscape, KCNA reported. 'The Republic of Korea [ROK], which is not serious, weighty and honest, will not have even a subordinate work in the regional diplomatic arena centred on the DPRK [The Democratic Republic of Korea],' Kim said, using the official names for the two countries. 'The ROK cannot be a diplomatic partner of the DPRK,' she added. The statement followed the latest outreach by Lee, who said last week that Seoul would seek to restore a 2018 military agreement between the two countries aimed at reducing border tensions, while urging Pyongyang to reciprocate by rebuilding trust and resuming dialogue. Since taking office in June, Lee has moved to repair relations that worsened under his conservative predecessor's hardline policies, including removing front-line speakers that broadcast anti-North Korean propaganda and K-pop. In a nationally televised speech on Friday, Lee said his government respects North Korea's current system and that Seoul 'will not pursue any form of unification by absorption and has no intention of engaging in hostile acts'. But he also stressed that South Korea remains committed to an international push to denuclearise North Korea and urged Pyongyang to resume dialogue with Washington and Seoul. Kim Yo Jong, who previously dismissed Lee's overtures as a 'miscalculation', described the latest gestures as 'a fancy and a pipe dream'. 'We have witnessed and experienced the dirty political system of the ROK for decades… and now we are sick and tired of it,' she said, claiming that South Korea's 'ambition for confrontation' with North Korea has persisted both under the conservative and liberal governments. 'Lee Jae-myung is not that man to change this flow of history' she continued, adding that 'the South Korean 'government continues to speak rambling pretence about peace and improving relations in order to lay the blame on us for inter-Korean relations never returning again'. Kim Yo Jong's comments follow Kim Jong Un's statements, carried by KCNA on Tuesday, which called the US-South Korea military exercises an 'obvious expression of their will to provoke war'. He also promised a rapid expansion of his nuclear forces as he inspected his most advanced warship being fitted with nuclear-capable systems. The North Korean leader last year declared that North Korea was abandoning longstanding goals of a peaceful unification with South Korea and rewrote Pyongyang's constitution to mark Seoul as a permanent enemy. His government has repeatedly dismissed calls by Washington and Seoul to revive negotiations aimed at winding down his nuclear and missile programmes, which derailed in 2019, after a collapsed summit with US President Donald Trump during his first term. Kim has also made Moscow the priority of his foreign policy since Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine, sending troops and weapons to support President Vladimir Putin's war, while also using the conflict as a distraction to accelerate his military nuclear programme.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store