Despite “co-ordeal” relations between New Delhi and Beijing, China has defended Beijing's repeated blockage of India's bids at the United Nations to list chief of Pakistan-based terror group Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM) Azhar Masood as a global terrorist. Defending his country, Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi claimed that there was no "consensus" among the members of the UN Security Council as well as the "directly concerned" parties - India and Pakistan over declaring Masood as a global terrorist. "If all parties come to a consensus, we will support it. But it is the parties that are rightly concerned who are not coming around to the same conclusion, like India and Pakistan don't have the same conclusions," Wang said on Friday.
Despite “co-ordeal” relations between New Delhi and Beijing, China has defended Beijing's repeated blockage of India's bids at the United Nations to list chief of Pakistan-based terror group Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM) Azhar Masood as a global terrorist. Defending his country, Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi claimed that there was no "consensus" among the members of the UN Security Council as well as the "directly concerned" parties - India and Pakistan over declaring Masood as a global terrorist. "If all parties come to a consensus, we will support it. But it is the parties that are rightly concerned who are not coming around to the same conclusion, like India and Pakistan don't have the same conclusions," Wang said on Friday.