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“India, China can determine global events in a big way”

Staff Reporter

International meeting on India-China-U.S. triangle begins

KOCHI: An international conference on the ‘India-China-U.S. Triangle,’ attended by eminent scholars on the subject, began here on Monday.

The three-day event is being organised by the Centre for National Renaissance, New Delhi, in association with John Fairbank Centre, Harvard University, U.S.; the Institute for International Studies and Centre for China in the World Economy, Tsinghua University, China.

Mutually beneficial

In his address at the inaugural session, Kerala Education Minister M.A. Baby said China had built a mutually-beneficial relationship with the U.S. without sacrificing its interests. India’s relationship with the U.S. should also be built without sacrificing our interests, he said.

Terming the conference a very important initiative, Mr. Baby said the Communist Party of India (Marxist) had a very clear perception about the relationship between India, China and the U.S. The bedrock of the relationship between India and China was its mindset for strategic and economic development. India and China could determine the course of international events in a very big scale through this relationship, he said.

Strategic ties

Subramanian Swamy, chairman of the New Delhi-based Centre for National Renaissance, said the aim of the conference was to highlight critical issues such as the economic and strategic relations between India, China and the U.S.

He said that the conference would deliberate on the bilateral and trilateral relations of these three nations in the coming decades.

Annual meet

It would be of extraordinary global interest, as India, China, and the U.S. were the most populous nations of the world, he said.

Highlighting the need to remove misunderstandings between the three nations, Dr. Swamy said the next round of the conference would be held at Tsinghua University in China. It would be an annual conference. “I am committed to setting up a centre focussing on the India-China-U.S. triangle,” he said.

In his welcome address, G.P.C. Nayar, chairman of the SCMS Group of Educational institutions, said the conference would discuss various issues related to India, China and the U.S.

Five sessions on the conference theme of India-China-U.S. Triangle will be held at the SCMS campus at Muttom, near here, on Tuesday.

Speakers

The speakers for Wednesday’s sessions include N. Ram, Editor-in-Chief of The Hindu; Tang Lu of Xinhua News Agency, China; Dr. Swamy; Yan Xuetong of Tsinghua University, China; Roderick Macfarquhar of Harvard University, U. S.; Salman Haidar, former Foreign Secretary; Merle Goldman of Harvard University, U. S.; Wang Yijiang of Tsinghua University, China; Hu Shisheng, Director, South Asia Studies, CICIR, China, and J. Panda of IDSA, India.

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