Want to resolve all issues with China: Home Minister Rajnath Singh

India never had any territorial ambitions and his government wants resolution of "perceptional differences" on this frontier, Rajnath Singh said.

Want to resolve all issues with China: Home Minister Rajnath Singh
KANPUR: India today said it has "honest intentions" for an amicable resolution of the border dispute with China and has asked it to come forward to end the differences.

"There is a perceptional difference along the Sino-Indian border. China says here is the border. We say no, here is the border. We have been trying to resolve the border problem. China should come forward. India wants a peaceful resolution of all disputes," Home Minister Rajnath Singh said here after inaugurating a battalion camp of border guarding force ITBP here.

Singh, who flew down from Delhi for the event, said, India never had any territorial ambitions and his government wants resolution of "perceptional differences" on this frontier.

"We are not expansionist. India's history says that we have never been expansionist. We have never attacked any country. We are worshippers of peace. China should understand this. We want to resolve all issues with honesty (imaandari ke saath)," he said.

The Home Minister said his ministry has already approved 35 new border posts for the troops of the Indo-Tibetan Border Police force, the designated security force at this frontier.

Twenty-two border posts are going to function soon while on 13 others works is on, he said.
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He said dedicated air connectivity has "already" been given to the ITBP in December last year and for enhanced mobility of the troops, work is on at 27 priority roads out of the 34 sanctioned by MHA.

"123 mobile phone towers have been sanctioned by the Ministry of Home Affairs for improved connectivity for ITBP personnel working in the icy heights here so that they can regularly talk to their families," he said.

Singh said work was on in his ministry to quickly ensure enhanced rotational postings for ITBP personnel.

He also referred to the recent visit of US President Barack Obama to India to say that the country wants better relations with every nation in the world and especially its immediate neighbours.
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"US President had come to India. We want to improve relations with America and other countries. Equally, we want to improve relations with our neighbouring countries. India always believes that the whole world is a family. We believe that neighbouring countries like Pakistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Bhutan all are part of our family. We want to maintain good relations with all our neighbouring countries as well as rest of the world," he said.

Replying to questions on the sidelines of the event, Singh said India had no problems with the increasing cooperation and friendship between its two neighbours - Pakistan and China.
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"We have no issues. Let them improve their relations. India wants to improve its relations with all neighbouring countries," he said.

He refused to comment on the recent charge sheet filed by NIA in the case of a Kashmiri resident Liyaqat Shah where the agency has accused Delhi Police's Special Cell of framing him as a terrorist.

"I don't want to comment. It is a sub-judice matter," he said.
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On the Borderline: A tour to India's eastern-most villages
1/11
Shantanu Nandan Sharma, ET Bureau

Welcome to India's eastern-most administrative circle, Kibithu, nestled in Anjaw district of Arunachal Pradesh. Standing on the bank of the Lohit river in Kibithu, it's difficult for a tourist to figure out which hill belongs to India and which to China.

ET Magazine travels to India's eastern-most villages on the Indo-China border in Arunachal Pradesh, and discovers a world where time stands still and the ghost of the 1962 conflict still lingers...
Shantanu Nandan Sharma, ET Bureau

Welcome to India's eastern-most administrative circle, Kibithu, nestled in Anjaw district of Arunachal Pradesh. Standing on the bank of the Lohit rive..
Read More
Musai, and six other villages of Anjaw, fall within 15 kilometres of the McMahon Line that separates India from China. Named after the then foreign secretary of the British-run government of India, Sir Henry McMahon, the line was drawn in 1914.

Don't look for the border, though; there's no fencing and the armies on both sides guard their respective areas on the basis of what they perceive is their land.
Musai, and six other villages of Anjaw, fall within 15 kilometres of the McMahon Line that separates India from China. Named after the then foreign secretary of the British-run government of India, S..
Read More
Arunachal, which is almost as large as West Bengal and larger than states like Punjab, Haryana and Himachal at almost 84,000 sq km, is distant — and the borders even more so.
Arunachal, which is almost as large as West Bengal and larger than states like Punjab, Haryana and Himachal at almost 84,000 sq km, is distant — and the borders even more so.
This writer reached the border villages on Day 3 after crossing the Lohit river by ferry and travelling about 450 km from the Dibrugarh airport in Assam.

There were two night halts, one at Tezu and the other at Hawai, the newly-built district headquarters of Anjaw.
This writer reached the border villages on Day 3 after crossing the Lohit river by ferry and travelling about 450 km from the Dibrugarh airport in Assam.

There were two night halts, one at T..
Read More
Most of the villagers in the border areas wear their patriotism on their sleeve, never losing an opportunity to remind this writer that they are Indians.

The lack of development and the fear of incursions are irritants but not large enough to upset their state of mind.
Most of the villagers in the border areas wear their patriotism on their sleeve, never losing an opportunity to remind this writer that they are Indians.

The lack of development and the fear..
Read More
There is pucca road till the border, but it gets narrower and is vulnerable to landslides. Just one boulder can block vehicular movement for hours.
There is pucca road till the border, but it gets narrower and is vulnerable to landslides. Just one boulder can block vehicular movement for hours.
When Kiren Rijiju, Union minister of state for home and a prominent BJP face from Arunachal Pradesh, announced in October that the Centre would build a 2,000 km-long border road, Beijing vociferously objected to it, saying India should not "further complicate" the festering disagreement.

But New Delhi retorted by saying that it would go ahead with the plan.
When Kiren Rijiju, Union minister of state for home and a prominent BJP face from Arunachal Pradesh, announced in October that the Centre would build a 2,000 km-long border road, Beijing vociferously..
Read More
While this gigantic horizontal road connecting border habitations is still at a planning stage, the existing vertical roads up to the border areas are being improved.

Old truss bridges are being replaced with concrete ones.
While this gigantic horizontal road connecting border habitations is still at a planning stage, the existing vertical roads up to the border areas are being improved.

Old truss bridges are b..
Read More
In Walong, a runway is being constructed by the side of the Lohit river for army aircraft.
In Walong, a runway is being constructed by the side of the Lohit river for army aircraft.
There are seven villages in Anjaw district of Arunachal Pradesh that fall within 15 km of the McMahon Line. They have a population of:

Hot Spring - 4
Kundan - 24
Dhanbari - 25
Krowti 27
Kaho - 65
Musai - 262
Kibithu - 723
Source: 2011 Census
There are seven villages in Anjaw district of Arunachal Pradesh that fall within 15 km of the McMahon Line. They have a population of:

Hot Spring - 4
Kundan - 24
Dhanbari - 25
Krowti..
Read More
READ MORE
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