India

Natural to hold G20 meetings anywhere in India: Modi on China’s objections over G20 event in ‘disputed Kashmir’

An armed forces personnel stands deployed behind a banner days ahead of G20 event in Srinagar, Kashmir. [FPK Photo/ Zainab]

China on may 19 opposed to a G20 tourism meeting in Kashmir calling the region a ‘disputed place’

New Delhi: Prime Minister of India Narendra Modi has said it is natural for India to hold G20 meetings in every part of its territory as he dismissed Chinese objections over some of the events being organised in Kashmir and Arunachal Pradesh.

The BJP led government has hosted G20 events across the country’s length and breadth. China, a G20 member, and Pakistan, which is not a member of the bloc, had objected to the decision to hold one of the events in “disputed region Kashmir”. 

China also disputes India’s sovereignty over Arunachal Pradesh. India has already dismissed claims by China and Pakistan.

“Such a question would be valid if we had refrained from conducting meetings in those venues. Ours is such a vast, beautiful and diverse nation. When G20 meetings are happening, isn’t it natural that meetings will be held in every part of our country,” Modi said in an inclusive interview to PTI late last week.

India held the third G20 working group meeting on tourism for three days from May 22 in Srinagar. Delegates of all G20 countries, barring China, visited the picturesque Valley for the event. A large number of delegates had also visited Arunachal Pradesh in March for a G20 event.

Dismissing Chinese claims, India had then said that it is free to hold meetings on its own territory. By the time India’s G20 presidency term ends, Modi said, over 220 meetings would have taken place across 60 cities in all 28 states and eight union territories, and added that over one lakh participants from around 125 nationalities would witness the skills of Indians.

Pertinently, on May 19, 2023, China said that it is opposed to a G20 tourism meeting in the “disputed Himalayan territory of Kashmir” in India and will not attend.

“China is firmly opposed to holding any kind of G20 meetings in disputed territory, and will not attend such meetings,” Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Wang Wenbin had said.

On June 5, 2019, India split the Muslim-majority state of Jammu and Kashmir to create the two federal territories of Jammu and Kashmir, and Ladakh.

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