Far better to impose a 100% tax on Chinese imports to raise
$6b to modernise the Indian army.
Will see if Sonia is built of the same stuff as Indira to
stand up to the Chinese bullies
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-22265133
India asks China to pull back troops in Ladakh
The foreign ministry asked China to "maintain the status quo" that
existed before the alleged incursion.
India says Chinese troops erected a camp on its side of the
ill-defined frontier in Ladakh region last week.
China denies violating Indian territory. The two sides are holding
talks to resolve the row.
"I would like to say we have all resolved all previous incidents
peacefully and it is our hope that we would resolve this incident too
peacefully," Indian foreign ministry spokesman Syed Akbaruddin told
reporters on Tuesday.
Mr Akbaruddin said the Chinese ambassador in Delhi had been summoned
to the foreign ministry on 15 April when India complained about
China's actions.
An Indian official quoted by the Associated Press news agency said
Chinese troops had strayed 10km (six miles) into Indian territory on
15 April and put up tents in the Depsang valley in Ladakh in eastern
Kashmir.
China dismissed reports of the incursion on Monday as media
speculation.
The two countries dispute several Himalayan border areas and fought a
brief war in 1962. Tensions flare up from time to time.
They have held numerous rounds of border talks, but all have been
unsuccessful so far.
The BBC's Soutik Biswas in Delhi says there has not been a single
fatality in skirmishes along the undefined India-China boundary since
1967, but the memories of the crushing defeat inflicted by the Chinese
on India in the 1962 war have not faded from the minds of some
Indians.
The presence of exiled Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama in the
Indian hill town of Dharamsala is also a source of tension between the
two nations.
But the Asian giants have much at stake and observers expect current
tensions to be contained.
China is one of India's largest trading partners, with two-way trade
volumes exceeding $65bn (£43bn) in 2012.