India, China set to reopen direct trade links
Afp, Nathu La Pass, India
The world's two most populous countries India and China are working to set up their first direct trade link since a 1962 border war by reopening a section of the famed Silk Road, Indian officials said Sunday. The point of contact is the 15,000-feet (4,545 metre) Nathu La pass on the border between India's Sikkim and China's Tibet where hundreds of Indian workers are repairing roads and building customs facilities, Sikkim government spokesman B.B. Gurung told AFP. "As per plans, border trading is to begin from October 2 with the reopening of the traditional Silk Road," Gurung said. "Infrastructure development and construction of roads leading to Nathu La is going on at a brisk pace and everything should be complete before the deadline." The trading post, 52 kilometres (33 miles) east of the Sikkim capital Gangtok, is the clearest sign yet of rapproachment between the two countries which still dispute much of their 4,000-kilometre (2,400-mile) border that stretches from Kashmir in the west to India's far-eastern state of Arunachal Pradesh.
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