China, India reach broad consensus in informal summit
WUHAN -- President Xi Jinping and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi reached broad consensus on the overarching, long-term and strategic issues of global and bilateral importance after an informal summit in Central China's Wuhan from April 27 to 28.
According to a press release issued on Saturday following the summit, the two leaders had in-depth discussions in a friendly atmosphere. They also reached consensus on their respective visions for national development as well as domestic and foreign policies.
Both sides share the view that the international landscape is undergoing profound changes, the relative power of countries is heading towards greater balance, and peace and development represent an irreversible trend. One the other hand, the world is faced with rising instability and uncertainty. China and India, as celebrated civilizations, the two biggest developing countries and two emerging economies each with a population of over one billion, are important countries with strategic autonomy. A peaceful, stable and balanced relationship between China and India is an important positive factor for the stability of the world. The two countries will work together to enhance stable and balanced development of major-country relations, advance stability, development and prosperity of Asia in the 21st century, promote the rejuvenation of the oriental civilization and make a positive contribution to global peace and development.
- Interest in Turkiye soars among Chinese tourists after introduction of visa-free entry
- Yunnan e-bike fire probe identifies raft of failings
- Investigation report released on e-bike fire that killed 8 in Southwest China
- Understanding Xi's vision of China and the world through New Year message
- 'Artificial sun' experiment finds way to break plasma density limit
- China reports 20% rise in inter-regional trips on first day of holiday
































