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China condemns Pathankot attack, says we share the 'feeling & anger' of India

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China on Saturday condemned the terror attack at Pathankot, saying the country shares the "feeling and anger" of Indian people.

"China is also a victim of terrorist act. We share the feeling and anger of Indian people. We strongly condemn such terrorist attacks, wherever it takes place", said Le Yucheng, Chinese ambassador to India.

The remarks came on the same day the Prime Minister Narendra Modi visited Pathankot airbase where senior officials of defence forces made a detailed presentation about their joint counter-terrorist and combing operation to tackle such a serious terrorist attack.

China condemns Pathankot attack, says the country shares the 'feeling and anger' of Indian people - IBNLive
 
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China on Saturday condemned the terror attack at Pathankot, saying the country shares the "feeling and anger" of Indian people.

"China is also a victim of terrorist act. We share the feeling and anger of Indian people. We strongly condemn such terrorist attacks, wherever it takes place", said Le Yucheng, Chinese ambassador to India.

The remarks came on the same day the Prime Minister Narendra Modi visited Pathankot airbase where senior officials of defence forces made a detailed presentation about their joint counter-terrorist and combing operation to tackle such a serious terrorist attack.

China condemns Pathankot attack, says the country shares the 'feeling and anger' of Indian people - IBNLive


In the past, India use to wait for condemnations/statements from the west on terrorism incidents in India. Now India is looking at China. What a change.

Talk is cheap and Chinese actions speak louder.


Why China Snubbed India on a Pakistan-based Terrorist at the UN
China’s habit of blocking Indian moves on Pakistan-based terrorism at the United Nations continues.
thediplomat_2016-01-04_04-09-34-36x36.jpg

By Ankit Panda for The Diplomat
June 25, 2015

On Tuesday, China blocked an Indian bid to question Pakistan at the United Nations sanctions committee (per resolution 1267) over the release of Zaki-ur-Rehman Lakhvi, a commander in Lashkar-e-Taiba, an anti-India terror group, and a central planner in the November 2008 terror attack on Mumbai which claimed over 160 lives. Lakhvi was released on bail by a Pakistani court in April, a move that India alleged was in violation of resolution 1267. China’s justification for blocking the Indian request—which sought clarification from Pakistan over Lakhvi’s release—was that India “failed to provide enough information.” The move is the latest in a series of recent moves by China to block or stall Indian proposals on countering or sanctioning Pakistan-based terrorism.
Though seemingly a bureaucratic snub from Beijing, the action has understandably stirred a hornet’s nest of negativity in India—Lakhvi’s connection to the 2008 Mumbai terror attacks, one of the worst terrorist incidents in recent Indian history, has ensured that the incident received top billing in the Indian press. Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who was in Beijing just over a month ago, conveyed his concerns to the Chinese government after the fact. The Times of India reported that the matter had been addressed to “the Chinese leadership” directly from Modi, who emphasized the issue of Lakhvi’s release as an “emotive issue for Indians.” A spokesperson for the Indian Ministry of External Affairs, in a statement, outlined the Indian government’s response:
The government had taken up the issue of violation of the 1267 sanctions regime in respect of Zaki-ur-Rehman Lakhvi. Our concerns in this matter were conveyed to the Chair of the 1267 Committee. We also raised this bilaterally with the other members of the Committee. In the case of China, this matter has been taken up at the highest level.
China’s move to block UN action is particularly remarkable given how reserved it has been in the past in being seen as the sole standout on an issue within the permanent five (P5) members of the security council. China’s move was procedural within the UN sanctions committee, but it still stood in sharp opposition to the United States, the United Kingdom, France, and Russia—all of whom were ready to entertain the Indian proposal. China’s effective “veto” on the matter should emphasize the extent to which Beijing is willing to publicly underwrite the Pakistani government’s approach to terrorism. Over the UN’s 70 year history, China has used its veto power at the security council just 10 times, making it the least obstructive member of the P5.
Indian reactions to the Chinese move have been understandably negative. Numerous commentators and analysts have remarked that China’s move shows that Beijing will continue to support Pakistan, regardless of Indian sensitivities. As Nitin Pai, director of The Takshashila Institution, a Bangalore-based think tank, notes, the episode highlights the necessity of New Delhi and Beijing liaising on important UN votes. The episode highlights the extent to which closer relations between India and China will be limited by Beijing’s interests in shielding Pakistan from international scrutiny.
China has in the past blocked India’s bids to get Jamaat-ud-Dawa (the political arm of Lashkar-e-Taiba in Pakistan) added to the United Nations Security Council’s terror list three times (JuD was finally added to the sanctions list in December 2008). As leaked U.S. State Department cables revealed in 2010, China placed “technical holds” at Pakistan’s request to block UNSC sanctions against Lashkar-e-Taiba and the al-Akhtar Trust (a charity front for Jaish-e-Mohammad, designated as a terrorist support organization by the United States). A similar “technical hold” was put in place in the case of India’s request to list Syed Salahuddin, a terrorist wanted in connection with numerous Hizbul Mujahideen attacks. Thus, China has a history of shielding Pakistan-based terror groups from sanctions under resolution 1267.
Beijing’s position on this issue is opaque, with few public statements or remarks on why China continues to block Indian requests on Pakistan-based terror. In an interview with the Press Trust of India in September 2014, China’s ambassador to India, Le Yucheng, noted that China’s position was that “China, India and Pakistan ought to work together to deal with the problem of terrorism and root out the cause of terrorism.” Borrowing a line verbatim from Pakistan’s diplomatic playbook, Le noted that “Pakistan is also a victim of terrorism.”
In their joint statement last month, Modi and Chinese Premier Li Keqiang marked their joint resolve against terrorism and “urged all countries and entities to work sincerely to disrupt terrorist networks and their financing, and stop cross-border movement of terrorists.” For China to walk the talk, it needs to reconsider its intransigence at the United Nations for Pakistan’s benefit. Going forward, New Delhi and Beijing will have to broach this topic at the highest levels.

Why China Snubbed India on a Pakistan-based Terrorist at the UN | The Diplomat
 
.
In the past, India use to wait for condemnations/statements from the west on terrorism incidents in India. Now India is looking at China. What a change.

Talk is cheap and Chinese actions speak louder.


Why China Snubbed India on a Pakistan-based Terrorist at the UN
China’s habit of blocking Indian moves on Pakistan-based terrorism at the United Nations continues.
thediplomat_2016-01-04_04-09-34-36x36.jpg

By Ankit Panda for The Diplomat
June 25, 2015

On Tuesday, China blocked an Indian bid to question Pakistan at the United Nations sanctions committee (per resolution 1267) over the release of Zaki-ur-Rehman Lakhvi, a commander in Lashkar-e-Taiba, an anti-India terror group, and a central planner in the November 2008 terror attack on Mumbai which claimed over 160 lives. Lakhvi was released on bail by a Pakistani court in April, a move that India alleged was in violation of resolution 1267. China’s justification for blocking the Indian request—which sought clarification from Pakistan over Lakhvi’s release—was that India “failed to provide enough information.” The move is the latest in a series of recent moves by China to block or stall Indian proposals on countering or sanctioning Pakistan-based terrorism.
Though seemingly a bureaucratic snub from Beijing, the action has understandably stirred a hornet’s nest of negativity in India—Lakhvi’s connection to the 2008 Mumbai terror attacks, one of the worst terrorist incidents in recent Indian history, has ensured that the incident received top billing in the Indian press. Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who was in Beijing just over a month ago, conveyed his concerns to the Chinese government after the fact. The Times of India reported that the matter had been addressed to “the Chinese leadership” directly from Modi, who emphasized the issue of Lakhvi’s release as an “emotive issue for Indians.” A spokesperson for the Indian Ministry of External Affairs, in a statement, outlined the Indian government’s response:
The government had taken up the issue of violation of the 1267 sanctions regime in respect of Zaki-ur-Rehman Lakhvi. Our concerns in this matter were conveyed to the Chair of the 1267 Committee. We also raised this bilaterally with the other members of the Committee. In the case of China, this matter has been taken up at the highest level.
China’s move to block UN action is particularly remarkable given how reserved it has been in the past in being seen as the sole standout on an issue within the permanent five (P5) members of the security council. China’s move was procedural within the UN sanctions committee, but it still stood in sharp opposition to the United States, the United Kingdom, France, and Russia—all of whom were ready to entertain the Indian proposal. China’s effective “veto” on the matter should emphasize the extent to which Beijing is willing to publicly underwrite the Pakistani government’s approach to terrorism. Over the UN’s 70 year history, China has used its veto power at the security council just 10 times, making it the least obstructive member of the P5.
Indian reactions to the Chinese move have been understandably negative. Numerous commentators and analysts have remarked that China’s move shows that Beijing will continue to support Pakistan, regardless of Indian sensitivities. As Nitin Pai, director of The Takshashila Institution, a Bangalore-based think tank, notes, the episode highlights the necessity of New Delhi and Beijing liaising on important UN votes. The episode highlights the extent to which closer relations between India and China will be limited by Beijing’s interests in shielding Pakistan from international scrutiny.
China has in the past blocked India’s bids to get Jamaat-ud-Dawa (the political arm of Lashkar-e-Taiba in Pakistan) added to the United Nations Security Council’s terror list three times (JuD was finally added to the sanctions list in December 2008). As leaked U.S. State Department cables revealed in 2010, China placed “technical holds” at Pakistan’s request to block UNSC sanctions against Lashkar-e-Taiba and the al-Akhtar Trust (a charity front for Jaish-e-Mohammad, designated as a terrorist support organization by the United States). A similar “technical hold” was put in place in the case of India’s request to list Syed Salahuddin, a terrorist wanted in connection with numerous Hizbul Mujahideen attacks. Thus, China has a history of shielding Pakistan-based terror groups from sanctions under resolution 1267.
Beijing’s position on this issue is opaque, with few public statements or remarks on why China continues to block Indian requests on Pakistan-based terror. In an interview with the Press Trust of India in September 2014, China’s ambassador to India, Le Yucheng, noted that China’s position was that “China, India and Pakistan ought to work together to deal with the problem of terrorism and root out the cause of terrorism.” Borrowing a line verbatim from Pakistan’s diplomatic playbook, Le noted that “Pakistan is also a victim of terrorism.”
In their joint statement last month, Modi and Chinese Premier Li Keqiang marked their joint resolve against terrorism and “urged all countries and entities to work sincerely to disrupt terrorist networks and their financing, and stop cross-border movement of terrorists.” For China to walk the talk, it needs to reconsider its intransigence at the United Nations for Pakistan’s benefit. Going forward, New Delhi and Beijing will have to broach this topic at the highest levels.

Why China Snubbed India on a Pakistan-based Terrorist at the UN | The Diplomat
Every one knows that most of the terrorists in Pakistan are supported by india as india is the only country in the world which can benefit from it but west will not publicly accept this as Pakistan is a muslim country and they want india to contain china but china knows and they will throw each indian claim down the drain.
 
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There you go, the brilliant Modi Sarkar stole last of our friend too
Modi ji you finally isolated Pakistan, now you can sleep
 
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There you go, the brilliant Modi Sarkar stole last of our friend too
Modi ji you finally isolated Pakistan, now you can sleep

The fundamental problem Pakistanis are facing is that they take everything at zero-sum levels. Which is not the case.
China and we don't have ideological problem, which is why even with our disputes we don't have rabid hostilities and adjust to each other at times and even support each other.

Pakistan's military elite take relationships of countries like relationships of individuals. This is not possible.

We have no interest in isolating you if your military can control themselves.

You may choose to not believe my words, but that's our stand; We are not interested to be your enemy. There are other problems we deal with.
 
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Every one knows that most of the terrorists in Pakistan are supported by india as india is the only country in the world which can benefit from it but west will not publicly accept this as Pakistan is a muslim country and they want india to contain china but china knows and they will throw each indian claim down the drain.
Acting to be a sleep? Don't worry no one can wake you up.
 
.
In the past, India use to wait for condemnations/statements from the west on terrorism incidents in India. Now India is looking at China. What a change.

Talk is cheap and Chinese actions speak louder.


Why China Snubbed India on a Pakistan-based Terrorist at the UN
China’s habit of blocking Indian moves on Pakistan-based terrorism at the United Nations continues.
thediplomat_2016-01-04_04-09-34-36x36.jpg

By Ankit Panda for The Diplomat
June 25, 2015

On Tuesday, China blocked an Indian bid to question Pakistan at the United Nations sanctions committee (per resolution 1267) over the release of Zaki-ur-Rehman Lakhvi, a commander in Lashkar-e-Taiba, an anti-India terror group, and a central planner in the November 2008 terror attack on Mumbai which claimed over 160 lives. Lakhvi was released on bail by a Pakistani court in April, a move that India alleged was in violation of resolution 1267. China’s justification for blocking the Indian request—which sought clarification from Pakistan over Lakhvi’s release—was that India “failed to provide enough information.” The move is the latest in a series of recent moves by China to block or stall Indian proposals on countering or sanctioning Pakistan-based terrorism.
Though seemingly a bureaucratic snub from Beijing, the action has understandably stirred a hornet’s nest of negativity in India—Lakhvi’s connection to the 2008 Mumbai terror attacks, one of the worst terrorist incidents in recent Indian history, has ensured that the incident received top billing in the Indian press. Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who was in Beijing just over a month ago, conveyed his concerns to the Chinese government after the fact. The Times of India reported that the matter had been addressed to “the Chinese leadership” directly from Modi, who emphasized the issue of Lakhvi’s release as an “emotive issue for Indians.” A spokesperson for the Indian Ministry of External Affairs, in a statement, outlined the Indian government’s response:
The government had taken up the issue of violation of the 1267 sanctions regime in respect of Zaki-ur-Rehman Lakhvi. Our concerns in this matter were conveyed to the Chair of the 1267 Committee. We also raised this bilaterally with the other members of the Committee. In the case of China, this matter has been taken up at the highest level.
China’s move to block UN action is particularly remarkable given how reserved it has been in the past in being seen as the sole standout on an issue within the permanent five (P5) members of the security council. China’s move was procedural within the UN sanctions committee, but it still stood in sharp opposition to the United States, the United Kingdom, France, and Russia—all of whom were ready to entertain the Indian proposal. China’s effective “veto” on the matter should emphasize the extent to which Beijing is willing to publicly underwrite the Pakistani government’s approach to terrorism. Over the UN’s 70 year history, China has used its veto power at the security council just 10 times, making it the least obstructive member of the P5.
Indian reactions to the Chinese move have been understandably negative. Numerous commentators and analysts have remarked that China’s move shows that Beijing will continue to support Pakistan, regardless of Indian sensitivities. As Nitin Pai, director of The Takshashila Institution, a Bangalore-based think tank, notes, the episode highlights the necessity of New Delhi and Beijing liaising on important UN votes. The episode highlights the extent to which closer relations between India and China will be limited by Beijing’s interests in shielding Pakistan from international scrutiny.
China has in the past blocked India’s bids to get Jamaat-ud-Dawa (the political arm of Lashkar-e-Taiba in Pakistan) added to the United Nations Security Council’s terror list three times (JuD was finally added to the sanctions list in December 2008). As leaked U.S. State Department cables revealed in 2010, China placed “technical holds” at Pakistan’s request to block UNSC sanctions against Lashkar-e-Taiba and the al-Akhtar Trust (a charity front for Jaish-e-Mohammad, designated as a terrorist support organization by the United States). A similar “technical hold” was put in place in the case of India’s request to list Syed Salahuddin, a terrorist wanted in connection with numerous Hizbul Mujahideen attacks. Thus, China has a history of shielding Pakistan-based terror groups from sanctions under resolution 1267.
Beijing’s position on this issue is opaque, with few public statements or remarks on why China continues to block Indian requests on Pakistan-based terror. In an interview with the Press Trust of India in September 2014, China’s ambassador to India, Le Yucheng, noted that China’s position was that “China, India and Pakistan ought to work together to deal with the problem of terrorism and root out the cause of terrorism.” Borrowing a line verbatim from Pakistan’s diplomatic playbook, Le noted that “Pakistan is also a victim of terrorism.”
In their joint statement last month, Modi and Chinese Premier Li Keqiang marked their joint resolve against terrorism and “urged all countries and entities to work sincerely to disrupt terrorist networks and their financing, and stop cross-border movement of terrorists.” For China to walk the talk, it needs to reconsider its intransigence at the United Nations for Pakistan’s benefit. Going forward, New Delhi and Beijing will have to broach this topic at the highest levels.

Why China Snubbed India on a Pakistan-based Terrorist at the UN | The Diplomat

If Pakistan has requested China to block a UN action there must have been a convincing evidence presented to Chinese government. China does not believe as much as India that Pakistan government is involved in protecting real terrorists. China also knows that Indian spies are active in promoting separatism or distablizing Pakistan.
India is also host to the Tibetan separatists and their terrorist elements.
 
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"China is also a victim of terrorist act."

This is becoming a fashionable statement these days-

If Pakistan has requested China to block a UN action there must have been a convincing evidence presented to Chinese government. China does not believe as much as India that Pakistan government is involved in protecting real terrorists. China also knows that Indian spies are active in promoting separatism or distablizing Pakistan.
India is also host to the Tibetan separatists and their terrorist elements.

China has always supported religious Jihadi extremism ever since 1970s when It supplied weapons to arm Pakistani, Arab and Afghan mujahideens which included Al qaeda and Taliban- Chinese weapons like MANPADs are also being found with ISIS terrorists-

It also funny how China knows about Indian spies which Pakistanis themselves have failed to present to the world not even a name till now- may be China knows Pakistan more than Pakistanis themselves-

India hosted a religious head of Buddhism a religion which was brutally crushed during cultural revolution of China which infact was real terrorism even according to Chinese- and Not Dalai Lama or Buddist religion which Mao tried to portray to his people-
 
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This is becoming a fashionable statement these days-



China has always supported religious Jihadi extremism ever since 1970s when It supplied weapons to arm Pakistani, Arab and Afghan mujahideens which included Al qaeda and Taliban- Chinese weapons like MANPADs are also being found with ISIS terrorists-

It also funny how China knows about Indian spies which Pakistanis themselves have failed to present to the world not even a name till now- may be China knows Pakistan more than Pakistanis themselves-

India hosted a religious head of Buddhism a religion which was brutally crushed during cultural revolution of China which infact was real terrorism even according to Chinese- and Not Dalai Lama or Buddist religion which Mao tried to portray to his people-

Strange logic! IS has hundreds of Japanese pickups, loads of weapons from every major country and does it mean to you that IS terrorists have support from all these countries? What a crap that China has always supported Jihadi extremism!

Dalai as well as his government in exile are priming terrorist unrests now and then in Tibet. They are not pure buddists.
 
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Nobody in China sympathizes with India. This is just the ambassador talking, not anybody in Beijing. India is the biggest sponsor of terrorism in the world.
 
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Nobody in China sympathizes with India. This is just the ambassador talking, not anybody in Beijing. India is the biggest sponsor of terrorism in the world.

Nobody in India cares for the two faced statements coming out of China. As for the biggest sponsor, your best friend is sleeping in bed with the best of them. Do not worry. Give it 15 years, you will learn the same lesson the Americans learned.
 
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Strange logic! IS has hundreds of Japanese pickups, loads of weapons from every major country and does it mean to you that IS terrorists have support from all these countries? What a crap that China has always supported Jihadi extremism!

Dalai as well as his government in exile are priming terrorist unrests now and then in Tibet. They are not pure buddists.

Pickup trucks are not weapon- If that was the case you could even rope in Switzerland since IS looted some Rolex watches too- And yes most weapons of IS are provided by those countries directly or indirectly- and most of these countries have supported IS covertly including US- It is now that they start barking at their own owner that they feel the heat- which may happen with China too sooner or later-

You can call it crap but when It hits the fan some are bound to land in China too-

What kind of unrest ? Democratic rights ?- Didn't the students ask the same thing while they were crushed by tanks at Tiananmen Square- And who is CCP to say who's real Buddhist and who's fake- It is ridiculous that an Atheist organization is issuing certificates on who are real Buddhists to the Buddhists- :o:
 
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I don't think China feels the anger as India. I mean what the hell you guys know man ?
Don't issue statements just for name sake.
 
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