Efforts on to make India world’s food basket: Shivraj Chouhan
The Union agriculture minister called on the researchers not confine their work to the lab but extend it to the farmers.
Ministry of External Affairs spokesperson Raveesh Kumar said that the bus service will be a violation of India’s sovereignty and territorial integrity.
India on Wednesday lodged strong protests with Pakistan and China over a bus service scheduled to be launched soon between Lahore and Kashghar, a city in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region in China’s far west, through Pakistan-occupied Kashmir (PoK) under the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) project.
Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) spokesperson Raveesh Kumar said on Wednesday the bus service will be a violation of India’s sovereignty and territorial integrity.
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“We have lodged strong protests with China and Pakistan on the proposed bus service that will operate through Pakistan-occupied Jammu and Kashmir under the so-called China-Pakistan Economic Corridor,” Kumar said in response to queries from the media.
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“It is government of India’s consistent and well-known position that the so-called China-Pakistan ‘boundary agreement’ of 1963 is illegal and invalid, and has never been recognised by the Government of India. Therefore, any such bus service through Pakistan Occupied Jammu & Kashmir will be a violation of India’s sovereignty and territorial integrity,” Kumar added.
According to reports, the new bus service will be launched between Lahore in Pakistan and Kashgar in China via Pakistan-occupied Kashmir on November 13.
The MEA spokesperson was responding to media queries regarding the proposed bus service.
The USD 50-billion CPEC, launched in 2015, is a planned network of roads, railways and energy projects linking China’s resource-rich Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region with Pakistan’s strategic Gwadar Port on the Arabian Sea.
(With agency inputs)
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