While participating in a discussion initiated by Congress' Passang Dorjee Sona in Assembly on the issue, Tuki said the state government had on several occasions impressed upon the Centre to take up the issue with Beijing.
"We are Indian first and Arunachal Pradesh which, shares 1080 km border with China, is an integral part of India," Tuki said.
In 2008, China first issued stapled visa to the people of Arunachal Pradesh and Jammu and Kashmir, he said.
"The Centre has been maintaining strong opposition to stapled visa issued to state's young sportswomen last year for which they were deprived of their rights to participate in an international sporting event because they were not allowed to visit China," the chief minister said.
Also Read
Earlier, raising the issue Sona urged the state government to move the Centre for allowing people from the state to visit China with stapled visa.
"When China is issuing stapled visa on Indian passport, why our officials and sportsmen are not allowed to visit the neighbouring country," he asked.
Taking part in the discussion, opposition leader Tamiyo Taga of BJP said China had been using Arunachal as an issue for diplomatic bargain.
He said the state government should ask the Centre to resolve the issue which is detrimental for the state.
"The Centre is taking up to link China's Kunming province through the historic Stilwel Road via Myanmar. Our doors should be open for economic development," he said.
"It is better not to repeatedly raise China issue as we do not want to jeopardize the bilateral relationship between the two Asian giants," he said.
"We are not Tibetans. We should move the Centre jointly," he said.