Hyderabad: The Xi Jinping government has triggered many militaries and diplomatic stand-offs against India and since the BJP led NDA came into power, Beijing has favoured India only once at international forums, while designating Masood Azahar as a global terrorist in 2019. Apart from it, the Xi Jinping regime's major approach has been to strengthen India's rival and create a ruckus.
Whether it's about acquiring Lanka's strategic Hambantota port to keep a close eye on the Indian Ocean or providing military logistics to Pakistan, Beijing has invested immense wealth in strategic countries that can never return its loan. And it would finally result in the Communist regime's indirect control over the country.
From opposing India's entry to the strategic NSG to backing Pakistan at the UN over its Kashmir rhetoric, it was China's top leadership (Xi Jinping's leadership that took) that shaped its metalic anti-India policy in a long time.
The Xi regime established major infrastructural projects OBOR, CPEC and others and it also expanded its assistance and developmental projects in multiple South Asian, African, East European, Latin American and Middle Eastern countries.
Xi has strengthened Beijing from Agri planning to its Mars mission. He took aggressive measures and despite massive criticism didn't withdraw the controversial move. Hong Kong's new security law proves his stubborn attitude.
His steps show always a non-compromising stand as when the ICJ verdict in 2016 favoured the Phillippines over the South China Sea claims but the Xi leadership boldly rejected the ICJ order and said that they aren't supposed to follow the rule.
From nearly a decade, Beijing has shaped its foreign policy in a colonial pattern. China invests a massive amount in infrastructural projects in foreign countries making them vulnerable to return the investment. So far, the policy has worked and brought them under China's domain.
Xi Jinping has defended boldly his suppressive actions over minorities and even despite much of global hue and cry over Uighurs and Xinjiang detention centres, merely a few individual sanctions have been imposed on certain Chinese officials by the US, while Europe has been its soft vocal critic only.
THE BEGINNING
It was during the end of the Korean War in 1953 when Xi Jinping was born to a close ally of China's founder Mao Tse-tung.
Xi Zhongxun, President Xi Jinping's father was a comrade of Mao.
He was purged from power in 1962. Xi Jinping was sent to a remote village in when Mao launched the Cultural Revolution in 1966. The revolution aimed to preserve communist ideology and remove remnants.
When all educations were halted in 1966 during Mao's cultural revolution -- that aimed to preserve communist ideology and remove remnants -- the High School student Xi Jinping was sent to a remote village for seven years.
Considered as a weakling person, Xi became strong, compassionate and developed good relations with neighbours that's clearly invisible in President Xi Jinping's regime. He did manual chores and subsisting on rice gruel. Mao's cultural revolution turned out to be a failure but Xi developed idealism and pragmatism in his approach.
Xi Jinping was accepted into the Communist Party in 1974 after multiple unsuccessful attempts.
A year later he started studying chemical engineering at Beijing's Tsinghua University.
POLITICAL PUSH
The engineering education helped him to scale up in the communist party amid the cold war era.
Xi gained military experience between 1979 and 1982 when he served as the vice-premier of Central Military Command.
As he seized powerful positions in the ruling party, Xi married the daughter of China's ambassador to Great Britain, Ke Lingling. But they were divorced within a few years.
Later, he served in key leadership posts in four provinces from 1983 to 2007.
His provinces' tenure began with Hebei province. During his tenure, Xi went to the US and learned the finer points of agriculture and tourism. He learned this while spending time in Iowa with an American family.
As he returned in 1987, Xi became vice mayor of Xiamen in Fujian. In the same year, he married to Peng Liyuan, who was serving as the army general in the People's Liberation Army.
Xi scaled up smoothly in the ruling leadership and served as governor of Fujian and Zhejiang provinces for many years.
It was Shanghai's pension fund scandal in 2007 that gave a boost to Xi's political profile and he grabbed the party secretary's chair.
He resketched the city's financial face and was named as the member of the key Politburo Standing Committee.
As Xi became the vice president of the nation in 2008, he led the preparations for the Beijing Olympics.
THE LEADER
His continuous successful attempts and crisis-solving nature pushed him to a higher level.
During his vice-presidential term in 2012, he resolved differences between Washington and Beijing. Xi travelled to the US, met Barack Obama and vowed to respect each other's interests in the Pacific-Asian region.
His grounded and corruption remover image established him strongly in the ruling party, and Xi was elected as general secretary of the Communist Party and chairman of the Central Military Commission in the same year.
Unlike other Chinese leaders, Xi Jinping vowed to remove the massive corruption from the system that had gripped the country badly. And he also vowed for middle-class demands as better income, health care, safety, jobs, education and better living.
It was March 14, 2013, when the chemical engineer-cum politician became President of the People's Republic of China.
The major achievement that Xi Jinping received was that after getting power, he immediately took aggressive actions to remove corruption from top officials.
During his regime, multiple powerful figures of the country were arrested over their involvement in corruption. The ruling communist party had sacked over lakh officials by the end of 2014.
Xi Jinping gave a boost to the slowing economy and in 2014 launched the One Belt One Road initiative to strengthen trade. In the same year, he came up with the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank.
Taking a bold step, he ended the one-Child policy in 2015.
He also removed China's old policy, reeducation through labour system. It used to punish individuals charged with petty crimes. Xi's elimination was seen favourably.
He targeted govt officials over massive corruption but critics believe that Xi clearly targeted his opponents while building his image as a corruption remover.
Human rights groups have criticized him for jailing journalists, lawyers and other citizens.
It was Xi who revolutionalised the censorship in the People's Republic of China and chopped it from the Western world. From the school's curriculums to internet usage, Xi made the communist regime to follows its citizens everywhere.
Xi has upgraded economic regulations that pushed his country forward but he has been accused of manipulating currency to increase the country's export.
Xi Jinping has the vision to build China as a global superpower. He implemented major military reforms in the PRC that now ranks the world's third strongest Army.
The Chinese naval capacities now dominate South Asia and it has made strategic islands on the disputed South China Sea.
Despite having boundary disputes with 18 nations and taking aggressive steps against them, global agencies have merely criticized the communist regime but never took any serious effort.
Xi Jinping regime has been continuously portraying his kingship by taking aggressive measures against its rivals. It curbs the freedom of the Chinese people and while violating punishes them badly. Jinping's disastrous dreams have led the PRC in massive controversies with multiple nations. But his global chain of assisting countries through massive infrastructural projects have given Beijing allies on cash but the colonial diplomacy can't retain for longer.