When Ji Peiding, deputy director of the Foreign Affairs Committee of the 
National People's Congress (NPC), delivered a speech at the Chinese Institute of 
International Affairs on May 31.
He revealed that the NPC is currently considering drafting a law related to 
land boundary. His speech was given in English and touched on the topic of 
"Foreign Affairs and the National Interest." 
Ji indicated that at present, NPC is thinking of drafting a "Land Boundary 
Law." Asked whether such law will cover the issues of China-India, China-Vietnam 
and China-Russia borderlines, Ji gave an affirmative answer, but did not 
disclosed elaborate and emphasized that NPC is deliberating over related 
issues. 
It has been a long time since the proposal of land boundary legislation was 
submitted. As early as when the NPC and Chinese People's Political Consultative 
Conference were convened in 2002, 96 representatives had submitted a joint 
proposal to draft up a land boundary (border) law as soon as possible. 
The proposal stated that as China's land boundary is over 20,000km in length, 
the country is urgently in need of working out a land boundary (border) law as a 
legal basis to settle related problems. 
Lack of a land boundary (border) law will be disadvantageous for handling 
emergencies, cracking down cross-border crimes and for frontier defense officers 
and soldiers to deal with border-related issues. 
China, which borders 14 countries with a 22,000km land boundary, is the 
country with the longest land boundary and most neighboring countries and one of 
the countries facing the most complicated boundary situations in the world. As 
of end 2004, approximately 90% of China's total boundary line had been 
delimited. 
At present, a pending problem is the negotiation on the borderline between 
China and India. The China-India borderline is about 2,000km long and has never 
been officially delimited. 
Both parties had a dispute over about 125,000 sq km of land. In 2003, 
premiers of both countries assigned special delegates to discuss and explore a 
framework for solving their borderline dispute from the overall political 
perspective of the relationship between both countries. 
After 5 rounds of talks, the special delegates from both parties finally came 
to a consensus for the "Agreement on the Political Parameters and Guiding 
Principles for the Settlement of the India-China Boundary 
Question."