Chinese premier arrives in Delhi for talks
Li Keqiang will meet with Indian counterpart Manmohan Singh and others for talks on border dispute and boosting trade.
Quote:
Li Keqiang, the Chinese premier, has arrived in India for a series of meetings with senior government officials aimed at rebuilding trust between the two countries and boosting trade ties.
Li, who arrived in New Delhi on Sunday afternoon, has said that his decision to choose India for his first foreign visit since taking office "indicates the great importance Beijing attaches to its relations" with New Delhi.
India for its part has been keen to ensure that a spat over troop movements in a disputed Himalayan border region last month is not allowed to derail a general warming in ties between the world's two most populous countries.
After more informal talks between Li and his Indian counterpart Manmohan Singh on Sunday night, the two premiers were due to hold more detailed discussions on Monday.
Li is also scheduled to meet Indian Foreign Minister Salman Khurshid and senior figures from the main opposition Bharatiya Janata Party before heading on Tuesday to the financial hub, Mumbai.
India's joint foreign secretary for East Asia, Gautam Bambawale, said at the weekend that "everything is on the table" for discussion with Li, including the border dispute in the remote Ladakh region which has been the subject of 15 rounds of high-level talks.
[size=""]Line of Actual Control[/size]
The row flared again last month after Delhi alleged Chinese troops intruded nearly 20 km into Indian-claimed territory, triggering a three-week standoff which was resolved when troops from both sides pulled back.
The Line of Actual Control between the nuclear-armed neighbours has never been formally demarcated, although they have signed accords to maintain peace in the region which was the site of a brief Indo-Chinese war in 1962.
The dispute almost led Khurshid to cancel a visit to Beijing before the pullback agreement, despite his insistence that the row should not serve to "destroy" recent diplomatic progress.
Sujit Dutta, a China expert at Delhi's Jamia Millia Islamia University, told the AFP news agency that the border dispute could "jeopardise the entire gamut of our relationship including trade ties".
China is India's second-largest trading partner, with two-way commerce totalling $66.5 billion last year.
Chinese vice Commerce Minister Jiang Yaoping told reporters last week that he was optimistic that the target of reaching $100 billion by 2015 would be met.
But the figure in 2012 was in fact a fall from the $74 billion for 2011 and India is also facing an increasing trade deficit with China that totalled $29 billion in 2012.
After wrapping up his visit to India, Li is due to travel to neighbouring Pakistan before heading to Switzerland and Germany.
india sih kalo masalah kedaulatan emang keras. tentara italia aja dipenjara gara2 nembak nelayan di perairan mereka.
bahkan uni eropa sampe memelas2 ga didenger sama mereka.
nah, ntar di update giman hasilnya pertemuannya dengan china