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50 years after war, China and India are partners: Beijing
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Oct 24, 2012


Beijing stressed Wednesday that India and China were "partners instead of rivals" with common interests in development, striking a conciliatory note on the 50th anniversary of a war between the neighbours.

Badly-equipped Indian troops were humiliated in the four-week war along the Himalayan frontier which begn in October 1962, with Chinese forces pouring through the mountains and advancing as far as the plains of Assam.

China then withdrew to the current border but it still claims much of the remote Indian state of Arunachal Pradesh, and the dispute consistently sours efforts to improve ties between the regional rivals.

"The current road has undergone deep and profound changes," China's foreign ministry spokesman Hong Lei said while remarking on the war anniversary.

"As the two most populous developing countries and emerging economies, both China and India face important opportunities of development (and) the two countries are cooperation partners instead of rivals.

"Common ground far outweighs disputes and common interests outnumber conflicts ... the world has enough space for the common development of China and India."

The border between India and China has been the subject of 14 rounds of fruitless talks since the war. Despite warm words during official visits, friction remains high on the border itself.

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China army reshuffle before party congress: state media
Beijing (AFP) Oct 23, 2012
China has appointed a new air force chief and reshuffled other top military leaders ahead of the ruling Communist Party's once-in-a-decade leadership transition next month, state media said. Ma Xiaotian, an army general who has taken part in military exchanges with countries including the United States, has been promoted to commander of China's air force, several state-run websites said, cit ... read more


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