What's new

CHINA WARNS INDIA OF 'SERIOUS CONSEQUENCES'after India refuses to extend visas of 3 journalists

Well ,you are not able to bully us .
Donot mistake us with that small nation around SCS.


Don't dare him... he can reduce Himalaya height to divert monsoon... he is Monsoon controller... Himalayan reducer...




* am going to Trivandrum... I want try some Sea food- fish, prawn ( fry, curry-Rice combination... must be spicy).... can you suggest me ...
 
.
Don't dare him... he can reduce Himalaya height to divert monsoon... he is Monsoon controller... Himalayan reducer...




* am going to Trivandrum... I want try some Sea food- fish, prawn ( fry, curry-Rice combination... must be spicy).... can you help me ...

Well I am not a Trivandrum native .:D
I am from Alleppey .
I think @SpArK is from Trivandrum

@nair can help you .He knows the places where we can get best food.
For me ,food available from resorts in Alleppey is very good,especially those Kuttanadan cuisines .
 
.
SOURCE: PTI

india-china-flags-afp.jpg


Taking umbrage at India’s refusal to extend visas to three Chinese journalists, a state-run daily on Monday warned of “serious consequences” if the matter was a fallout of Beijing’s refusal to back New Delhi’s NSG membership bid.

“…speculation is swirling that India is taking revenge against China for the latter’s opposition to India joining the Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG)…If New Delhi is really taking revenge due to the NSG membership issue, there will be serious consequences,” the editorial in the Global Timessaid.

Three Chinese journalists based in India representing the state-run Xinhua news agency were denied permission for extended stay in the country.

The visas of the three journalists, Delhi-based Bureau Chief Wu Qiang and two reporters in Mumbai — Tang Lu and Ma Qiang, are expiring at the end of this month. All three had sought extension of their stay by a few months till their successors arrive.

India’s act was described as an “expulsion” by some foreign media, the editorial said.

“No official reason was given for the rejection of the visa renewals. Some Indian media claimed that the three journalists are suspected of impersonating other people to access several restricted departments in Delhi and Mumbai with fake names. There were also reports attributing it to the journalists’ meeting with exiled Tibetan activists,” it said.

Quoting its former Indian correspondent, Lu Pengfei, Global Times said there is “absolutely no need” for Chinese journalists in India to conduct interviews under fake names and it is completely normal for reporters to request interviews with the Dalai Lama group.

“The act has sent negative messages and media communications between China and India will inevitably be negatively impacted,” the editorial titled, ‘India’s expulsion of reporters is a petty act’, said.

It claimed that by opposing India’s NSG membership, China was not being disrespectful because it was obeying the rule that all NSG members are required to be signatories to the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT).

“India has a suspicious mind. No matter whether Chinese reporters apply for a long-term or a temporary journalist visa, they will come across many troubles. Complaints about difficulties of acquiring an Indian visa have also been heard from other Chinese who deal with India. In contrast, it’s much easier for Indians to get a Chinese visa,” it said.

“On the visa issue this time, we should take action to display our reaction. We at least should make a few Indians feel Chinese visas are also not easy to get,” it added. However, the editorial also pitched for maintaining friendly Sino-Indian ties.

“The China-India bilateral relationship now is on a sound track, with a by and large tranquil border and steadily booming trade. The two in general are able to maintain neutrality with regard to international affairs that are related to the other side.

“China should stick to a friendly strategy toward India, as we believe bilateral friendship is in the interests of India as well,” it said.

Separately, a report in the same daily on the visa issue quoted “experts” as saying that the move shows a lack of trust in the Chinese government and reflects poorly on Sino-Indian relations.

Referring to Indian media reports that claimed the three journalists had recently traveled to Bengaluru and met exiled Tibetan activists, which became an issue with the government, the report quoted Lu, also a former People’s Dailyreporter in India, as saying that he had visited Dharamsala with two of his colleagues in 2014 using their true identities. “Besides, Bengaluru is not a restricted area.”

People’s Daily is the official newspaper of the ruling Communist Party of China.

“I have frequently met exiled Tibetan activists through intermediaries, and even spoke to the Dalai Lama. I should have been expelled several times if that was the reason the Indian government gave. It was very likely an act of revenge against China for denying India membership in the Nuclear Suppliers Group,” Lu said.

“China has always supported a full discussion within the NSG on the membership issue and a decision based on the consensus of all sides through consultation,” the report said referring to previous comments to the media made by the Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Hong Lei.

“The incident could indicate an increasing mistrust between the two countries. India thinks China does not pay it enough respect as a regional or global power,” Zhang Jiadong, a professor with the Center for American Studies at Fudan University, told the Global Times.

“However, we should have faith as the two sides possess the possibility of more cooperation and common interests,” Zhang added.


http://www.ibtimes.co.uk/beijing-mo...ences-refusing-renew-journalists-visa-1572372

http://indianexpress.com/article/in...e-media-warns-india-of-repercussions-2933978/

http://www.huffingtonpost.in/2016/0...s-india-of-serious-consequences-for-not-exte/
Based on my experience with Chinese people.....Chinese only go ballistic on rants when they know they are wrong....they believe that yelling on top of their voice and posturing will make other person give up his position.... here is something Chinese media is not telling their people.:

CHINA’S OFFICIAL news agency Xinhua is learnt to have admitted to the Indian government that two of its journalists had committed “transgression” by visiting Tibetan settlements in Karnataka.

Confirming this Monday, sources said Chinese embassy officials met officials in the Ministry of External Affairs and have decided to normalise relationship.
Link: http://indianexpress.com/article/in...its-transgression-by-its-journalists-2935755/
 
.
View attachment 320678
YES, we will cancel their first 3 of the visa.


India's democracy include dalit and 1/2 of the poor?


We have enough confidence -- -- -- -- -- -- -- India don't have the guts to attack as they did in 1962.

Once the attacks in India, we have enough ability to let his pain.

China and India in the border forces contrast is 1:4.

India is still not confident.

At last. India is a superpower, because India has been declared, and China believe they are developing countries. Would you please stop lying.


The Indian media didn't tell you "superpower" is India??

Chinese media are still told me that "China is a developing country"

And. I do think a country with a per capita GDP of $8400, is not a superpower.

Perhaps indians thought their GDP per capita belongs to super power level.


I have a question - Tibet's basic salary is about 15000 Indian rupees, then the Tibetan refugee camp in India how much salary?

I have seen Chinese documentary on India, clearly wages in India.

And China's reality TV show also often appear the Indian people, they spoke a real India.

Waiting for your answer.

Of Course . This is not CCP China where elites can do anything against common citizens that asking for freedom for critiicism
 
.
Well I am not a Trivandrum nabve .:D
I am from Alleppey .
I think @SpArK is from Trivandrum

@nair can help you .He knows the places where we can get best food.
For me ,food available from resorts in Alleppey is very good,especially those Kuttanadan cuisines .



Am not aware of fish varieties in kerala ... been with friends before but never paid much attention... I like spicy food ...
 
.
Hotel Mubarak - Lunch for sea food,

Hotel Zam Zam - dinner good fo all non veg foods

Hotel Buhari - for mutton and other NV dishes

Kethal Chicken - Famous for spring chicken

Joint in Karamana - Mutton dishes



Well I am not a Trivandrum native .:D
I am from Alleppey .
I think @SpArK is from Trivandrum

@nair can help you .He knows the places where we can get best food.
For me ,food available from resorts in Alleppey is very good,especially those Kuttanadan cuisines .
 
.
Of Course . This is not CCP China where elites can do anything against common citizens that asking for freedom for critiicism
Low IQ will think in a one-party state, the people are not free. People's IQ lower than they are.

Do you want to see how Chinese citizens perform free? I will compare with India.
 
.
Hotel Mubarak - Lunch for sea food,

Hotel Zam Zam - dinner good fo all non veg foods

Hotel Buhari - for mutton and other NV dishes

Kethal Chicken - Famous for spring chicken

Joint in Karamana - Mutton dishes

@danger007 there you goes ,dishes served .
For more info visits kerala corner
 
.
Hotel Mubarak - Lunch for sea food,

Hotel Zam Zam - dinner good fo all non veg foods

Hotel Buhari - for mutton and other NV dishes

Kethal Chicken - Famous for spring chicken

Joint in Karamana - Mutton dishes



Am asking name of dish variety... hehe
 
.
Low IQ will think in a one-party state, the people are not free. People's IQ lower than they are.

Do you want to see how Chinese citizens perform free? I will compare with India.

So far only thing I can see here is the low IQ of your post :D
 
.
Tit for tat: Chinese daily urges Beijing to make 'few Indians' feel visas are not easy to get


Tit for tat: Chinese daily urges Beijing to make 'few Indians' feel visas are not easy to get


IANS Jul 25, 2016 19:26 IST

#Beijing #China #Chinese journalists #New Delhi #NewsTracker #NSG #Nuclear Suppliers Group #Xinhua News Agency

0 Comments

  • 2

  • 0



Beijing: Warning of "serious consequences" over the expulsion of three Chinese journalists by India, a state-owned daily urged Beijing to make "a few Indians" feel the pain over Chinese visas.

"If New Delhi is really taking revenge due to the NSG membership issue, there will be serious consequences," an editorial in The Global Times said.

ChinaFlag_AFP.jpg

Representational image. AFP

India has refused to extend the visas of three Chinese journalists from the Chinese government-run Xinhua news agency. But New Delhi said Xinhua could always send new replacements.

The Global Times noted that no official reason was given for the rejection of the visa request of the three Chinese journalists.

"Some Indian media claimed that the three journalists are suspected of impersonating other people to access several restricted departments in Delhi and Mumbai with fake names.

"There were also reports attributing it to the journalists' meeting with exiled Tibetan activists.

"Moreover, speculation is swirling that India is taking revenge against China for the latter's opposition to India joining the Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG)." The hard-hitting editorial noted that Indian society had in recent years witnessed soaring nationalism.

"Crowned by Western public opinion as the world's biggest democracy, the Indians have a strong sense of pride.

"China should stick to a friendly strategy toward India... On the visa issue this time, we should take actions to display our reaction. We at least should make a few Indians feel Chinese visas are also not easy to get."

By refusing to extend their visas, the Chinese journalists will have to leave India.

The three include Wu Qiang, the Xinhua bureau chief in Delhi, and Tang Lu, chief correspondent at the Mumbai bureau.

The Global Times said: "It's not a good thing that India has turned down Chinese reporters' applications for new visas. The act has sent negative messages and media communications between China and India will inevitably be negatively impacted.

"India has a suspicious mind. No matter whether Chinese reporters apply for a long-term or a temporary journalist visa, they will come across many troubles."

Ties between India and China have been strained since Beijing came out strongly against New Delhi's entry into the Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG) on grounds that it was not signatory to the NPT.



http://www.firstpost.com/world/tit-...s-feel-visas-are-not-easy-to-get-2914914.html
Coming from China... a country that has a history of throwing out people .. this sounds hilarious.... and full of hipocracy...

Here is a brief history of how China treats journalists from other countries.:

  • For three years from 2009, the Washington Post tried getting a Chinese visa for Andrew Higgins, who had angered Beijing nearly 20 years earlier by writing about Mongolian dissidents. It was never granted.
  • In 2012, Al Jazeera’s long-time Beijing correspondent was expelled from China after a series of stories on corruption, victims of the Sichuan earthquake, and other topics.
  • Nearly two dozen journalists from The New York Times and Bloomberg News were threatened with expulsion in 2013, after both publications wrote articles on Communist Party leaders’ family wealth. US vice president Joe Biden had to step in.
  • Most recently, the correspondent for France’s L’Obs magazine waskicked out of China at the end of 2015, for making the relatively benign observation that Beijing had failed to “acknowledge its own responsibility for the rising exasperation of its minorities” in the Xinjiang region.
  • In May 2012, Al-Jazeera’s sole English-language reporter in China, Melissa Chan, was expelled as she was accused of some unspecified violations. This was seen as a hardening of China’s attitude toward international media it views as a threat to the authoritarian government’s authority and global image.
  • Again in 2014, the New York Times reporter Austin Ramzy was forced to leave China because of processing delays for his press credentials. Many reporters of outlets such as the New York Times, Bloomberg, Reuters and Al Jazeera have encountered difficulty obtaining permission to report in China in recent years, as stories by some of these outlets outlining the wealth amassed by the families of senior Chinese leaders, including President Xi’s, have proved a major irritant and embarrassment to the Chinese authorities.
  • The Foreign Correspondents’ Club of China had released an extensive report in 2013 on the barriers faced by overseas journalists in the country, which said “in 2013 it became patently obvious that Chinese authorities abuse the press card and … visa renewal process in a political manner.”
 
. . . . .

Pakistan Defence Latest Posts

Pakistan Affairs Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom