China's Li to pay tribute to heroic Indian doctor

China's Li to pay tribute to heroic Indian doctor

China's premier will pay his respects Tuesday to the family of an Indian doctor who died treating Chinese troops more than 70 years ago, becoming a rare symbol of friendship between the two nations.

The statue of Indian doctor Dwarkanath Kotnis, one of five Indian physicians dispatched to China to provide medical assistance during the Second Sino-Japanese War in 1938, in the Martyrs' Memorial Park in Shijiazhuang, central China's Hebei province, May 20, 2013. China's premier will pay his respects to the family of the Indian doctor who died treating Chinese troops 70 years ago.

Li Keqiang, like Chinese leaders before him, will take time out of his busy India visit to meet relatives of Dwarkanath Kotnis, who provided emergency medical aid for four years during the Sino-Japanese war of 1937-1945.

Manorama Kotnis, one of the doctor's seven siblings and the only one still alive, will meet the Chinese premier at the Taj Mahal Palace hotel in Mumbai, along with four of her younger relatives.

"I'm very proud and happy that such a big (personality) still remembers my brother," the 92-year-old told AFP on Monday at her home in Mumbai's Vile Parle suburb, where old pictures of her legendary brother sit proudly on display.

"He was really courageous and he wanted to go out and help people."

While ties between Beijing and New Delhi have often been strained, with a legacy of distrust from a border war in 1962, Kotnis has remained a widely revered figure in China for his war work, which cost him his life.

Born in western Maharashtra state, of which Mumbai is the capital, he was one of five medical volunteers dispatched from India in 1938, following a request for help from the fellow Asian giant.

Manorama, who was a teenager when her older brother left, said the team was only supposed to go for a year.

But her brother stayed on for four years, joining the Chinese Communist Party and marrying a Chinese nurse, with whom he had a son a few months before he died of epilepsy in 1942, aged 32.

Manorama, a former nutritionist, said he struggled with the workload and the lack of proper food on the frontline, where he was required at times to operate continuously for 72-hour stretches.

"He developed weakness because of that. Even in the hospital there was not much assistance."

The Indian family kept in touch with his widow Guo Qinglan, who died last year and whose portrait also sits in the apartment, along with ornamental Chinese gifts from their high-profile visitors over the years.

Former Chinese president Hu Jintao met the family in Mumbai in 2006 and they gave him a copy of the Bollywood film "Dr Kotnis Ki Amar Kahani" (The Immortal Story of Dr Kotnis). A Chinese movie has also documented his life.

Li will meet the family on his second and final day in India, which marks his first foreign visit since taking office in March.

He is scheduled to address university students in New Delhi before travelling to Mumbai, where he will visit the offices of Tata Consultancy Services, India's biggest IT outsourcing firm.

Li and India's Prime Minister Manmohan Singh pledged on Monday to resolve a border dispute that has soured ties for decades, saying good relations between the two Asian giants were key to world peace.

The pledge resulted in positive press on Tuesday for Singh, with Indian papers praising his "tough new approach" and candour during talks with Li on the issue.

"Singh rightly insisted that without an early resolution of the boundary dispute, tensions on the frontier are bound to increase and called on Li to revive the stalled boundary talks," The Indian Express said in an editorial.

"Singh's tough new approach was also reflected in another important issue in bilateral relations - respect for each other's core interests."

According to The Times of India, Singh sent a "tough signal" to the Chinese premier on the issue during their talks.

Agreement to resolve the issue is a sentiment shared by Manorama, who expressed sadness that the two countries had failed to forge closer links in the decades since her brother lost his life.

"They should come together, live in peace, help each other," she said.

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