China to gain most from GMR’s Male woes

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Huma Siddiqui: New Delhi, Dec 08 2012, 02:20 IST
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between the West and East Asia.

However, experts now opine that this military relationship could be put on hold. With elections a little more than a year away, the future of the Maldives and the region is still uncertain. Given the confused nature in which the Maldivian transfer of power took place, India would benefit from an election held as soon as possible, say experts.

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Reader's Comments (3)| Post a Comment

Mr

Vicky | 08-Dec-2012Reply | Forward
Indian bureaucracy will never shy away in giving lame excuses or finding scapegoats for all of their failures. Given GMR dubious track record in its own country, it should not make any hue and cry over the treatment.

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Kumar | 08-Dec-2012Reply | Forward
India should adopt a pro-active policy towards keeping its strategic interests safer. India should do everything possible to keep a regime which is pro-India or pro-democratic, even by force or by any means before the Chinese take over or overtake us as they did in Sri Lanka. India should not allow China to get landed in India's backyards at any cost, rip in the bud is the best policy here considering the long-term interest of India.

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raj | 08-Dec-2012Reply | Forward
Funny how China is factored in every failure this nation suffered, even though the Chinese themselves haven't been in touch with the Maldives regarding this issue.

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