China, India should work for common development, win-win cooperation: Ambassador

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China and India have the vision and capability to chart a course of common development and win-win cooperation among emerging countries, said Chinese Ambassador to India Sun Weidong.

Sun made the remarks in a recent interview with Xinhua as Chinese President Xi Jinping will soon attend the second informal meeting with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi in India.

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi visits the Emperor Qinshihuang's Mausoleum Site Museum in Xi'an, capital of northwest China's Shaanxi province, May 14, 2015. [Photo/Xinhua]

Noting that Xi and Modi reached an important consensus in April last year on the development of China-India ties in an informal meeting in China's Wuhan, Sun said over the past year, the two countries have actively implemented the consensus, and the bilateral ties have been upgraded and embarked on the track of sound and stable development.

Noting that Xi and Modi have met several times on multilateral occasions, maintaining close high-level exchanges, Sun said, "Government departments, political parties, legislatures and military of the two countries have actively engaged in high-level exchanges and shared governance experience."

Besides, the two countries have made progress in aligning development strategies, Sun said. "In September this year, the two sides held the 6th Strategic Economic Dialogue and the 9th Financial Dialogue, and reached new consensus on cooperation in policy coordination, infrastructure, energy conservation and environmental protection, high technology, energy and medicine."

Also, the two sides have stepped up coordination in global governance, he said. "On major international issues, China and India have same interests and similar positions. The two sides have strengthened coordination and cooperation to inject new impetus into the development of bilateral relations."

"In economy and trade, China has long been India's largest trading partner and India is China's largest trading partner in South Asia," he said.

Sun said trade volume between China and India stands at nearly 100 billion dollars.

"More than 1,000 Chinese companies have increased their investment in industrial parks, e-commerce and other areas in India, with a total investment of 8 billion dollars and 200,000 local jobs created," Sun said.

He added that Chinese mobile phone brands have been well-established in the Indian market, and Indian companies are also actively expanding the Chinese market, with a cumulative investment of nearly 1 billion dollars in China.

China and India have also witnessed the booming of people-to-people exchanges, Sun said.

The two countries have established the mechanism of high-level people-to-people exchanges, opening a new chapter in personnel and cultural exchanges, he said.

"Practicing yoga, drinking Indian black tea and watching Bollywood movies have become the fashion among Chinese youth. Chinese movie stars such as Jackie Chan are household names in India. People in India enjoy acupuncture, martial arts and Chinese cuisine," he said.

People practise Yoga during a Taichi and Yoga show at the Temple of Heaven in Beijing, capital of China, May 15, 2015. The show is held to promote the cultural exchange between China and India. [Photo/Xinhua]

Sun added that the two countries have established 14 pairs of sister cities and provinces, with two-way personnel exchanges exceeding one million per year.

Noting that China has embarked on the path to achieve its two centenary goals, and India has put forward the vision of building a "new India," Sun said the two sides "should see each other's development as important opportunities for each other, support and synergize their development strategies."

"As the only two major developing countries with a population of over one billion and important representatives of emerging economies, China-India relations transcend the bilateral dimension and assume global and strategic significance," Sun said.

He said the two countries should strengthen strategic communication and enhance political mutual trust.

"We should go beyond the model of differences management, actively shape bilateral relations and accumulate positive energy," he said. "We should enhance exchanges and cooperation, promote convergence of interests and achieve common development."

Noting that the rise of protectionism and unilateralism is seriously affecting global stability, Sun said "the uncertainty of the international situation poses common challenges to both China and India."

"Strengthening solidarity and cooperation between us is an opportunity for our respective development and the world at large," he said, adding that "we should firmly uphold the international system with the United Nations at its core and make the international order more just and equitable."

"At the regional level, we should resolve disputes peacefully through dialogue and jointly uphold regional peace and stability," Sun said.

"We will continue to carry out China-India Plus cooperation, promote free trade, infrastructure development and connectivity in the region, harmonize policies and development strategies of all countries to achieve common prosperity," he added.

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