
Chinese President Hu Jintao (L) shakes hands with Indian
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh before holding talks in New Delhi, capital
of India, Nov. 21, 2006. During the talks, the two leaders reached an
important consensus on developing bilateral strategic and cooperative
partnership. (Xinhua Photo) Photo Gallery
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 Chinese President Hu Jintao (L) shakes
hands with Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh before holding talks in
New Delhi, capital of India, Nov. 21, 2006. During the talks, the two
leaders reached an important consensus on developing bilateral strategic and
cooperative partnership.(Xinhua Photo) Photo Gallery
>>>
|
NEW
DELHI, Nov. 21 (Xinhua) -- China and India agreed here on Tuesday to make
concerted efforts to push forward their bilateral strategic and cooperative
partnership.
Visiting Chinese President Hu Jintao and Indian Prime
Minister Manmohan Singh held talks here in the day after a grand welcoming
ceremony presided over by Indian President Abdul Kalam.
During the talks, the two leaders reached an
important consensus on developing their strategic and cooperative partnership.
They agreed that the two countries shared extensive
and sustained common interests at bilateral, regional and international facets,
and were committed to safeguarding the rights and interests of developing
countries and promoting multi-polarization of the world and democracy in
international relations.
They hold that the Sino-Indian relationship has gone
far beyond a bilateral level and is of global significance.
Hu and Singh highly evaluated bilateral relations.
Singh said Hu's visit was a new milestone in
bilateral relations.
Hu, for his part, said China welcomed India's
development, which offered opportunities rather than posing threats to China.
Hu said China took India as an important cooperative
partner in Asia and the world at large, and considered their bilateral
relationship as one of China's important bilateral relationships.
To develop a long-term and steady partnership with
India was the Chinese government's fixed policy and strategic decision, and the
Chinese side would work with the Indian side to push the bilateral partnership
forward continuously, said Hu.
He made a six-point proposal for the development of
bilateral ties.
The first is to strengthen dialogues and
consultations and enhance political mutual trust with more high-level contacts
and exchanges between different departments and at various levels of the two
sides.
The second is to promote economic and trade
cooperation for reciprocal and win-win results.
Both sides should expand trade, and remove trade and
investment barriers for a realization of their trade target of 40 billion U.S.
dollars a year in 2010.
They should strive to complete the feasibility study
on the regional trade arrangement.
The third is to expand substantial cooperation and
shared interests with keys on information technologies, energy, resources,
infrastructure, science, technology and agriculture.
The fourth is to promote cultural exchanges and
consolidate the friendship basis covering such areas as culture, education,
tourism, religion, press and sports.
Both sides should pay due attention to the
China-India friendship year through tourism set for 2007 to ensure it is a
success, and the Chinese government has decided to invite 500 young Indians to
China in the next five years.
The fifth is to push forward border demarcation
negotiations and maintain peace and tranquility in border areas. The two sides
should reach a just and rational settlement framework acceptable to both at an
early date through peaceful and friendly negotiations on an equal footing and
with mutual respect.
The sixth is to strengthen multi-lateral cooperation
to safeguard common interests such as those in the United Nations and other
multi-lateral organizations.
Singh said India looked at bilateral relations from
the perspective of mutually beneficial cooperation instead of from that of
rivalry, adding that to strengthen bilateral friendship and cooperation would
exert a positive impact on world situation.
He said India paid great attention to bilateral
relations and it was the consensus of all Indian political parties to forge firm
and friendly relations with China.
The Indian side held that no force could hinder the
further development of India-China relations, said Singh.
He agreed with Hu on the six-point proposal and said
an early settlement of the boundary issue conformed to the fundamental interests
of the two countries, hoping that it would be solved through friendly
negotiations.
After the talks, Hu and Singh attended a signing
ceremony for bilateral cooperative documents concerning investment, quarantine,
human resources development, forestry, culture and the establishment of
consulates-general at Guangzhou and Kolkata.
Hu arrived here on Monday evening for a state visit
to India at the invitation of Indian President Abdul Kalam.
This is the first visit to India by a Chinese head of
state in 10 years.
India is the third leg of Hu's four-nation tour,
which has already taken him to Vietnam and Laos, and will also take him to
Pakistan.
He also attended the 14th APEC (Asia-Pacific Economic
Cooperation) Economic Leaders' Meeting from Nov. 17 to 19 in Hanoi, capital of
Vietnam.