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India's Modi tells China to 'reconsider' approach
By Benjamin HAAS
Beijing (AFP) May 15, 2015


Modi's Shanghai visit recalls Indians of old
Shanghai (AFP) May 16, 2015 - Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi's visit to Shanghai follows in the footsteps of a large ethnic Indian population which lived in the thriving port city before China's Communists took power in 1949.

Thousands of Indians worked in Shanghai in jobs ranging from business to law enforcement during the 19th and early 20th centuries, when Britain dominated the International Settlement and India was part of the British Empire.

Around 2,800 Indians, mostly Sikhs, were recruited into the Shanghai Municipal Police (SMP) which kept order in the concession, according to one estimate, and a Sikh policeman wearing a red turban remains a symbol of the times, immortalised in a wax figure at a city museum.

"Sikhs added colour to the Shanghai landscape with their flame-red turbans and soldierly appearance," Meena Vathyam wrote on her blog "Sikhs in Shanghai".

"The Parsees ran successful businesses," she said, referring to Indian followers of the minority Zoroastrian faith. "Sikhs, Parsees indeed were a very important part of tumultuous Shanghai city."

Many of the SMP officers who opened fire on Chinese protesters on the penultimate day of May in 1925, triggering anti-foreigner demonstrations and riots across China known as the May 30th Movement, were Sikhs.

The Indian population in the International Settlement alone peaked at around 2,400, according to the research of Robert Bickers, a professor at the University of Bristol.

Many more will have lived in the wider city.

Indians had their own chamber of commerce, the Indian Merchant Association, as well as sports clubs for football and field hockey. The Parsees had their own cricket club.

Besides police, common jobs included being watchmen and traders, but they faced racism from other foreigners and the Chinese.

Shanghai natives gave the police the derogatory nickname "Red Head Number Three", which entered local dialect as a reference to Sikhs in general.

"I heard my parents use it," said Lynn Pan, a Shanghai resident and author of several books about the city including "Old Shanghai: Gangsters in Paradise."

"This was the British Empire. They brought Sikhs," she told AFP.

Now, the Indian Consulate in Shanghai estimates around 4,000 of its nationals live in the city, with another 4,000 in two neighbouring provinces.

Modi is scheduled to meet some of them at a reception on Saturday afternoon.

"The Indian community is a mix of entrepreneurs, professionals employed by Indian and global multi-national corporations, service personnel, senior business executives and traders," the consulate said.

Visiting Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi told his Chinese counterpart on Friday that Beijing needs to "reconsider its approach" to relations between the Asian giants, as the Hindu nationalist leader departed from the usual diplomatic pleasantries.

Modi, who despite his hardline reputation has moved to engage with Beijing since his election last year, made the remarks after being welcomed to the Great Hall of the People by Premier Li Keqiang.

"I stressed the need for China to reconsider its approach on some of the issues that hold us back from realising full potential of our partnership," Modi said, adding that he "suggested that China should take a strategic and long-term view of our relations".

His comments stood out from the usual public declarations by diplomatic visitors to Beijing, who normally stick to uninterrupted pledges of friendship and good relations.

The world's two most populous nations are jockeying for regional influence in Asia and their relationship is coloured by a brief but bloody 1962 border war over the northeastern Indian state of Arunachal Pradesh, parts of which Beijing claims as South Tibet.

Another bone of contention is what Beijing sees as Delhi's support of the Dalai Lama -- a Nobel Peace Prize laureate whom China considers a separatist -- and the Tibetan government in exile, both based in India.

"Our relationship has been complex in recent decades," Modi said, adding there were issues that "trouble smooth development of our relations".

"But, we have a historic responsibility to turn this relationship into a source of strength for each other and a force of good for the world," he said, adding that the Chinese leadership had been "responsive" in the meetings.

"We are committed to set a new direction between the two largest Asian countries," he said.

- 'More common interests than differences' -

Modi began his three-day visit on Thursday in Xian, the capital of Chinese President Xi Jinping's home province Shaanxi, where he was hosted by the head of state. This was the first time Xi had welcomed a foreign leader to his hometown, Chinese media reported.

In another moment of warmth, a selfie of Modi and Li smiling in the sunshine at what appeared to be Beijing's Temple of Heaven was posted on both the Indian leader's Sina Weibo Chinese social media account and Twitter -- access to which is blocked in China.

"It's selfie time!" Modi captioned the picture on Twitter. "Thanks Premier Li."

After their formal meeting, Li said in a speech: "We do not deny that there are some disagreements between us, but we have far more common interests than differences.

"We agree that we need to keep up the momentum on the special representatives' talks on the boundary question and seek a fair, reasonable and mutually acceptable solution."

The two countries signed 24 documents, including agreements to cooperate in fields ranging from aerospace and railways to tourism and education, although no details were given, as well as open consulates in Chennai and Chengdu.

But China has become increasingly assertive in territorial disputes in recent years and relations remain delicate, as demonstrated by the mixed rhetoric.

"The bilateral relationship is still vulnerable to many sensitive issues," said an editorial in the Global Times, affiliated with the Communist Party mouthpiece People's Daily. "Lack of mutual trust still disturbs both sides."

China is India's biggest trading partner with two-way commerce totalling $71 billion in 2014. But India's trade deficit with China has soared from just $1 billion in 2001-02 to more than $38 billion last year, Indian figures show.

After his meeting with Li, Modi told students at Beijing's elite Tsinghua University that India's democracy and youthful population were key assets for his country.

"India has 1.2 billion people, and 800 million below 35 years old," he said. "This is a very good advantage, and democracy is also a key advantage to us."


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