China, India
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China’s Foreign Minister Wang Yi made a veiled reference to the U.S. in New Delhi on Monday, by noting that India and Beijing should find ways to coexist against a backdrop of “unilateral bullying.” C
As Washington slaps punitive oil-linked tariffs on New Delhi, India’s response is less about panic and more about positioning. Rather than scrambling for cover, South Block appears to be turning the moment into a strategic chess move,
India and China agreed on Tuesday to resume direct flights and step up trade and investment flows as the neighbours rebuild ties damaged by a 2020 border clash.
China’s Foreign Minister Wang Yi in New Delhi. After years of tension—border clashes, app bans, suspended flights, frozen visas—India and China are cautiously resetting ties. But this shift isn’t driven by trust.
The foreign ministers of India and China met in New Delhi on Monday in a renewed effort by the nuclear-armed Asian rivals to ease tensions after a five-year border standoff significantly hurt relations.
India’s top court has ordered authorities in New Delhi to start removing all stray dogs from its streets and to sterilize and relocate them to shelters permanently.
India has suspended an 11% import duty on cotton until September 30, in a move seen as a signal to Washington that New Delhi is willing to address U.S. concerns on agricultural tariffs, while also easing pressure on its garment industry.
India's government plans to ban online games played with money, a proposed bill showed on Tuesday, in what would be a heavy blow for an industry that has attracted billions of dollars of foreign investment.
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi will meet with China’s top diplomat on Tuesday in a sign of easing tensions after a yearslong standoff between the nuclear-armed neighbors.
China relations, they should be partners, not view each other as threats, says China's foreign minister Wang Yi — and flies to Islamabad