China is an opportunity for India — not a threat, Beijing says as more apps are banned

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China is an opportunity for India — not a threat, Beijing says as more apps are b
China has accused India of discriminatory practices that violate World Trade Organization rules after the latter banned more Chinese mobile apps.
New Delhi issued an order on Tuesday to block 43 apps, claiming they were engaged in activities that threatened India’s national security.
To-date, India has blocked 220 Chinese mobile apps, some of them made by China’s prominent consumer-facing tech companies like ByteDance, Tencent and Alibaba.

Chinese President Xi Jinping and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi during a photograph session before the 18th meeting of the Council of the Heads of States of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization.

SINGAPORE — China has accused India of discriminatory practices that violate World Trade Organization rules after New Delhi banned another 43 Chinese mobile apps.

New Delhi issued an order on Tuesday to block those apps, claiming they engaged in activities that threatened India’s national security.

“This action was taken based on the inputs regarding these apps for engaging in activities which are prejudicial to sovereignty and integrity of India, defence of India, security of state and public order,” India’s information technology ministry said.

It added that the decision was taken “based on the comprehensive reports received from Indian Cyber Crime Coordination Center, Ministry of Home Affairs.”

The affected apps include short-video streaming app Snack Video, which has reportedly dominated the charts in terms of downloads in recent months. It is owned by Tencent-backed Kuaishou and is an alternative to the massively popular TikTok.

Other banned apps include Alibaba’s e-commerce platform AliExpress, streaming app Taobao Live and workplace messaging app DingTalk, as well as delivery app Lalamove India and a handful of dating sites.

China and India are the opportunities of development to each other rather than threats.
Chinese Embassy in India
“We firmly oppose the Indian side’s repeated use of ‘national security’ as an excuse to prohibit some Mobile APPs with Chinese background,” the Chinese embassy in India spokesperson Ji Rong said in a statement on Wednesday.

“We hope the Indian side provides a fair, impartial and non-discriminatory business environment for all market players from various countries including China, and rectify the discriminatory practices violating WTO rules,” the embassy statement said.

“China and India are the opportunities of development to each other rather than threats,” it added.

Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson Zhao Lijian said on Wednesday that Beijing expresses “serious concerns over India’s claim” and called on New Delhi to “immediately correct its discriminatory approach and avoid causing further damage to bilateral cooperation.”

Tuesday was not the first time India moved to ban Chinese apps from the country.

In June, New Delhi blocked 59 mobile apps created by Chinese companies and in September, another 118 apps were added. That included TikTok and the wildly popular Playerunknown’s Battlegrounds (PUBG) mobile game which had ties to Chinese internet giant Tencent.

To date, India has blocked 220 Chinese mobile apps, some of them made by China’s prominent consumer-facing tech companies like ByteDance, Tencent and Alibaba.

PUBG Corporation, the South Korean game developer, is reportedly planning its return to the Indian market by cutting ties with Tencent in India. Tencent used to publish the PUBG mobile game in India.

A new game called PUBG Mobile India is expected to be released, according to TechCrunch. The report also said the company, and its parent firm, KRAFTON, have plans to make an investment worth $100 million in India.

The slew of bans came after bilateral relations between India and China soured in June, following border clashes in the Himalayas that killed 20 Indian soldiers. The face-off sparked anti-China sentiments across India as people called for a boycott of Chinese products.

Prior to the border clash, New Delhi already introduced restrictive measures around Chinese foreign direct investments into India.

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