In this photograph taken on September 18, 2014, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi shakes hands with Chinese President Xi Jinping during a meeting in New Delhi. Modi is due to visit China next week.

AFP/New Delhi

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi will make his first visit to China next week, seeking to overcome strains between the nuclear-armed rivals over a border dispute and Beijing's growing regional clout.

Modi will meet with China's leaders during the three-day visit as part of an Asian tour that will also take him to South Korea and Mongolia, the Indian government said on Tuesday. China confirmed the visit.

Modi is eager to secure Chinese funding for crumbling infrastructure and other projects for India after storming to power last May on a pledge to reform and revive Asia's third-largest economy.

Modi joins Weibo

Ahead of the visit, Modi joined Sina Weibo, China's version of Twitter, attracting tens of thousands of followers within hours. 

"I'm looking forward to my visit to China from May 14 to 16 to enhance the friendship between our two ancient civilisations and the largest developing countries," one Modi post said on Tuesday.

"I firmly believe this visit to China will strengthen the stability, development and prosperity of Asia," wrote Modi, an avid user of social media who has 12 million followers on Twitter.

Many comments on Weibo, however, were more confrontational than welcoming, with plenty demanding India give back territory along the border, a source of tension between the two nations for decades.

Modi, a staunch nationalist, has signalled he will pursue a more muscular foreign policy than the previous left-leaning government, including on border issues.

Chinese President Xi Jinping visited India in September when the leaders of the world's two most populous countries emphasised cooperation and business deals such as funding for railways.

But Xi's rare visit, the first by a Chinese president in eight years, was overshadowed by a standoff between troops on their remote frontier.

Relations are dogged by mistrust stemming from a brief, bloody border war in 1962 over the northeastern Indian state of Arunachal Pradesh, areas of which Beijing claims as Zangnan or South Tibet.

Both sides regularly accuse the other's soldiers of border incursions.

Modi warned China to shed its "expansionist mindset" at an election rally last year. China hit back, saying it "never waged a war of aggression to occupy any inch of land of other countries".

Counter-balance to China  

Modi will travel to Beijing, Shanghai and the historic northern city of Xian before becoming the first Indian premier to visit Mongolia. He will then head to South Korea for talks with President Park Geun-Hye and business leaders.

Modi on Weibo said Xi had invited him to visit "his hometown Xian" during a previous meeting.

Since winning power, Modi has tried to strengthen relations with India's neighbours, along with the United States, as a counter-balance to China's rising influence in the region.

China has cultivated close ties with India's arch-foe Pakistan, and its growing influence over other South Asian nations has sparked worries of a deliberate strategy to encircle India.  

Modi also said on Tuesday he would meet business leaders in Shanghai and promote India among Chinese investors.

China is India's biggest trading partner with two-way commerce totalling close to $70bn. But India's trade deficit with China has soared from just $1bn in 2001-02 to more than $40bn, Indian figures show.

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