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China denies visa to top general in Indian Occupied Kashmir

We Indian have tried our best no publicize the Tibet issue but look what we get. Now the time has come for the Indians to reply in case tone as the Chinese. One of the things we could do PI$$ the Chinese.
I would suggest

BHARAT RATNA

1242039935260bharatratn.jpg


For

DALAI LAMA

:yahoo::yahoo::yahoo::yahoo:

dalailama.jpg
 
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We Indian have tried our best no publicize the Tibet issue but look what we get. Now the time has come for the Indians to reply in case tone as the Chinese. One of the things we could do PI$$ the Chinese.
I would suggest

BHARAT RATNA


For

DALAI LAMA


:yahoo::yahoo::yahoo::yahoo:


Luckily the GoI aren't petty children like you.

And by all means shower the man with medals and accolades, those haven't turned into an army willing to invade Tibet thus far nor is it looking like anyone gives a damn. So go ahead.
 
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We Indian have tried our best no publicize the Tibet issue but look what we get. Now the time has come for the Indians to reply in case tone as the Chinese. One of the things we could do PI$$ the Chinese.
I would suggest

BHARAT RATNA

1242039935260bharatratn.jpg


For

DALAI LAMA

:yahoo::yahoo::yahoo::yahoo:

dalailama.jpg


no they have to do more to pi$$ us more to come to that extent.... :cheers: aint gonna happen...

China needs to understand that ok they are daddy of asia but what they are dealing with is India which are the unidentical twin of them. they can Pi$$ us off and we have many monkeys in our bag to pi$$ them off equally
 
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Similar thing happened in 2007 but with IAS Officer.
China denies visa to IAS officer from Arunachal
SWARAJ THAPA
Posted online: Saturday, May 26, 2007 at 0000 hours IST

NEW DELHI, MAY 25: Chinese territorial claims over Arunachal Pradesh—a key component of the longstanding boundary dispute with India—has once again come in the way of bilateral interactions, acting as a major party pooper for a group of IAS officers headed for a management program to China.
A study visit of 107 IAS officers to Beijing and Shanghai, part of a programme to learn more about Chinese economic growth and policies, has been cancelled because of Beijing’s refusal to grant visa to one IAS officer hailing from Arunachal Pradesh.

The denial of visa to the officer, Ganesh Koyu, a 52-year-old promotee, obviously stems from China’s refusal to accept Arunachal Pradesh as part of the Indian territory. In fact, Beijing is understood to have pointed out that the man in question is a Chinese citizen. An Arunachali, Koyu is presently secretary-in-charge of panchayati raj, textiles and handicrafts in the Arunachal government. Beijing’s decision not to play host to an Arunachali was conveyed to New Delhi earlier this week. The officers from the 1991 batch, who on Thursday finished first part of their training program at the Lal Bahadur Shastri National Academy in Mussoorie and were in anticipation of their China leg of the program, will now report back to their respective posts. They were to visit the National School of Administration in Beijing and the China Executive Leadership Academy, Pudong in Shanghai and interact with their Chinese counterparts for two weeks.

The public policy analysis-training programme, sponsored by the government, was devised by IIMs in collaboration with three US universities, including Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public affairs and designed to help officers take on administrative challenges presented by India’s rapid economic growth.

Sources here contend that the inclusion of the Arunachali officer could not have been an oversight, when China has refused to acknowledge the northeastern state as Indian territory. Earlier, the Chinese had denied visa to an Arunachal chief minister to visit Beijing.
 
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China is trying very hard to find excuses to teach u india a second lesson:rofl::rofl:

no it looks like we are playing pissing competion who will pi$$ off other more....

Anyways the good news is China is sending its counterpart to India to sort out the matter.... hope peace prevails.
 
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Visa row: China in damage control mode

NEW DELHI: Amid reports that an Indian Army General was denied a visa to visit China, the country's envoy Zhang Yan visited South Block on Friday afternoon to meet officials of the ministry of external affairs, sources said.

They said Zhang was holding meetings with senior officials of the ministry.

The Chinese envoy's South Block sojourn follows a media report that Lt. Gen. B S Jaswal, who heads the Northern Command, was to have visited China for a high-level exchange but was denied a visa as he had Jammu and Kashmir under his area of control.

The external affairs ministry said Jaswal's visit had not taken place "due to certain reasons".

"While we value our exchanges with China, there must be sensitivity to each others' concerns," said ministry spokesperson Vishnu Prakash.

India has cancelled defence exchanges with China after Beijing refused to allow the visit of the Indian Army's General Officer Commanding-in-Chief, Northern Area Command, because he was responsible for Jammu & Kashmir, a state that China maintained was disputed.

In keeping with a practice for the past few years, the Indian defence establishment in June had began preparations for a regular high-level exchange visit to China this August by one of the top commanders of the Indian army — the northern area commander, Lt-Gen B S Jaswal.

However, Delhi was stunned when Beijing responded to his nomination by saying that it was unwilling to "welcome" Gen Jaswal because he "controlled" a disputed area, Jammu and Kashmir.

An angry New Delhi shot off a strongly worded demarche to Beijing, protesting its decision. Soon thereafter, India refused permission to two Chinese defence officials to come to India for a course at the National Defence College. A subsequent visit by Indian military officials to China was also cancelled by India.

To ensure that there was no ambiguity about the reason for its annoyance, New Delhi has since also bluntly told Beijing that the unexpected decision to block Lt-Gen Jaswal's visit to China was the reason behind India's decisions.

New Delhi found China's behaviour particularly provocative because in August 2009, Lt-Gen V K Singh, currently the Army chief and then the GOC-in-C Eastern Command, had visited China for a similar high-level exchange. If territorial sensitivity was the issue with China, then Singh's visit should have been even more problematic because, as head of the Eastern Command, he had jurisdiction over Arunachal Pradesh, a state that is claimed by China.
 
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And by all means shower the man with medals and accolades, those haven't turned into an army willing to invade Tibet thus far nor is it looking like anyone gives a damn. So go ahead.

But then why the mighty Chinese are scared of the Monk.



meardalailamacloseup.jpg
 
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But then why the mighty Chinese are scared of the Monk.



meardalailamacloseup.jpg

All credit to the DL, his speaking tours are impressive. But he is not a threat to Tibet, just an embarrassment for China abroad (he wouldn't even be that, if the CCP knows how to handle PR).

Time is running out for Tibet. The demographics are shifting towards Han majority especially in the cities, Mandarin is taught in school with Tibetan taught in later years as an elective. The new highspeed rail connects Lhasa with the rest of China and Tibet grows economically dependent.

What is the west or India going to say when, the population is inter-mingled with Han Chinese, speaks Mandarin and no longer swayed by the Lama class?
 
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India summons Chinese envoy over visa row

India summoned China's ambassador on Friday to protest the refusal of visa to Northern Army Commander Lt Gen B S Jaswal to visit that country because he comes from 'sensitive' Jammu and Kashmir, which China has long considered as 'disputed territory'.



Chinese Ambassador to India Zhang Yang met Joint Secretary (China) Gautam Bambawale and is understood to have discussed the issue, sources said.



China has denied permission to Lt Gen B S Jaswal, General Officer Commanding-in-Chief of Udhampur-based Northern Command, saying that 'people from this part of the world come with a different kind of visa", sources said.



This has led to a strong reaction from India which has put all defence exchanges on hold.



Gen. Jaswal was to visit China in July as part of defence exchanges but it could not take place in view of the Chinese objection, sources said here today.
 
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