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Indians caught in China trade row freed: India FM
by Staff Writers
New Delhi (AFP) Jan 4, 2012


India's foreign minister said on Wednesday that two traders who claimed they were abused and detained during a business dispute in China had been freed and were travelling to Shanghai.

The assurance came after the two men spoke to Indian television channels by telephone from the Chinese city of Yiwu, saying they had no access to fresh water in a hotel room where they were under police custody.

The two men said they had been detained since mid-December by Chinese businessmen and "tortured like animals" before being handed over to the police a few days ago.

"Let us not blow it out of proportion," Foreign Minister S.M. Krishna told reporters in New Delhi.

"The larger perspective of the safety of these two Indian nationals... is now practically achieved and now in two hours' time they will be in Shanghai," he said.

Krishna hinted that the two may not be able to leave China immediately because of the unresolved business dispute.

"Let us not forget there is a civil litigation and we will have to make an assessment of that also," the foreign minister added.

The case has triggered an official complaint from the Indian government after one of its diplomats was manhandled during a court case in Yiwu over the weekend as he was trying to secure the release of the two men.

Shyam Sundar Agarwal and Deepak Raheja told NDTV that they were workers of a trader accused by Chinese businessmen of failing to honour bills in Yiwu, which is home to the world's largest wholesale market for consumer goods.

Raheja told NDTV that "the situation is getting from bad to worse and our lives are in terrible danger".

"If our government cannot do anything in 24 hours then I will commit suicide. We don't have anything in our hotel room for eating or drinking," he said earlier Wednesday.

A Chinese spokesman in Beijing earlier Wednesday confirmed the two Indians were in a hotel in Yiwu, adding they were being given police security.

"China always attaches great importance to maintaining the rights and interests of foreign businessmen in China," Hong Lei said.

India has advised its nationals not to do business in Yiwu due to tensions over the case, which threatens to create friction between the two uneasy Asian neighbours.

New Delhi's foreign ministry on Monday summoned Zhang Yue, Beijing's deputy chief of mission in New Delhi, to complain about the diplomat being manhandled in court.

The Chinese spokesman in Beijing on Wednesday denied any mistreatment had occurred.

Relations between China and India have often been fraught, principally over disputed borders and the presence of the exiled Tibetan spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama, on Indian soil.

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India urges traders not to do business in Chinese city
Beijing (AFP) Jan 3, 2012 - The Indian embassy in Beijing on Tuesday urged its nationals not to do business in the eastern Chinese city of Yiwu after reports that two Indians there were "mistreated" over allegedly unpaid bills.

The incident triggered an official complaint from India after a diplomat called S. Balachandran was manhandled during a court case in Yiwu over the weekend in which he was trying to secure the release of the two traders.

"Indian traders and businessmen are hereby cautioned not to do business with Yiwu in Zhejiang province," the embassy said in a statement on its website.

"They should be aware that when there are trade disputes with Yiwu, the Indian businessmen/traders can be illegally held under detention and mistreated by Chinese businessmen there.

"Based on experience, there is no guarantee that legal remedies will be readily available. Furthermore, in case of disputes arising, experience suggests that there is inadequate protection for safety of persons."

Yiwu is home to the world's largest wholesale market for consumer goods.

A spokesman for the Indian embassy said the advisory was in response to an incident involving two traders in Yiwu, but would not comment further. The consulate-general in Shanghai would not provide any details either.

Calls to China's commerce ministry, as well as the government, Communist Party committee and police in Yiwu went unanswered. A spokeswoman for the foreign ministry would not immediately comment on the issue.

But according to the Press Trust of India news agency, who spoke to one of the traders over the phone, the two were "virtually held captive by local traders" in Yiwu before being handed over to police.

"The two... said they were merely employees of a company that owed payments to local suppliers for the goods purchased and that their owner, whose identity has not been established, had fled," the report said.

An Indian government official, who declined to be named, told AFP Monday the foreign ministry had summoned Zhang Yue, Beijing's deputy chief of mission in New Delhi, to complain about the courtroom assault.

Despite growing trade ties, relations between China and India have often been fraught and both fast-developing countries remain suspicious of each other as they compete for resources and influence overseas.



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