Referring to Modi's comments on Balochistan for the first time, an article in the state-run Global Times website said he is raising it to divert attention from the tense situation prevailing in Kashmir.
"After reluctant attempts to revitalise Indo-Pak relations, Narendra Modi, now in his third year as Indian prime minister, has lost patience and switched to the expected hardline tone of hostility," it said.
"This is not the only provocation. Another was his Independence Day address on August 15," it said, referring to Modi's remarks that people of Balochistan, Gilgit and PoK were thanking him for raising human rights violations there.
This is the first time Chinese official media referred to Modi's remarks about PoK and Balochistan, where China is building USD 46 billion Economic Corridor, which was objected to by India as it goes through the disputed territory.
"This risky gesture is not supported by everyone in the Indian government. Outstanding reservations come from his intelligence chiefs and the external affairs ministry," said the article 'Modi's provocations raise risks for India'.
"Why would Modi choose to publicly reference Balochistan when his country kept denying an Indian role there? Even on Kashmir, why would he be so provocative when the Pakistani response will inevitably draw world attention at a time his government is trying to prevent the issue being internationalised?," it said.
"This may only make it even trickier for India to find a resolution by deliberately expanding the range of bilateral conflicts," the article said.
"Another concern for Modi is the 19th South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC) summit, which will be held in Pakistan this year. Modi is scheduled to visit Islamabad for the SAARC summit in November, but the impatient prime minister has decided to break up the Indo-Pak impasse to see what can be fished from the troubled waters," it said.
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