China vows action against those involved in torture of Indians
In the wake of torture of two Indian businessmen near Shanghai, China has initiated criminal proceedings against five locals suspected for the act as it promised to address the issue and give due attention to the safety of Indian nationals on its soil.
The assurance was given by Chinese Ambassador Zhang Yan when he met Gautam Bambawale, Joint Secretary (East Asia) in the External Affairs Ministry, this afternoon.
The envoy said 'serious attention' was being given to the issue related to the two businessmen and hoped that it would be resolved as quickly as possible, sources said.
The Ambassador also assured the MEA that due attention was being given to the safety of Indian nationals and businessmen, they said.
The assurance coincided with the criminal action being initiated against five Chinese nationals who are suspected to have been involved in the torture of the two Indian businessmen - Shyamsunder Agarwal and Deepak Raheja, the sources said.
Agarwal and Raheja have complained of ill-treatment and torture ever since they were 'kidnapped' on December 15 by some local people.
The locals, working with a company, have been demanding payment of their dues after the owner of the firm fled.
Agarwal and Raheja say they are merely employees of a company which owed money to its Chinese suppliers and their employer has fled without clearing the dues.
Diplomat not 'ill-treated'
China also dismissed as 'untrue' charges that Indian diplomat S. Balachandran was ill-treated at a court in Yiwu when he was trying to secure the release of Agarwal and Raheja.
"Relevant reports saying that the Indian consular official was forbidden to take food and medicine and was besieged during his stay in Yiwu are not true," Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Hong Lei told a media briefing here.
Hong's remarks came when he was asked to comment on reports that Balachandran, a diabetic, was denied food and water, leading to his fainting at the court in the Chinese trade hub of Yiwu which he had visited to obtain the release of the two Indians - Shyamsunder Agrewal and Deepak Raheja - on December 31.
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