• 16 November, 2024
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China, India have encountered ‘some setbacks’ in bilateral ties: Foreign Minister Wang

Mon, 07 Mar 2022   |  Reading Time: 3 minutes

Beijing, Mar 7 (PTI): China and India have encountered “some setbacks” in the bilateral relations in recent years, Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi said on Monday as he called for managing their differences over the boundary issue through equal footing consultations for a “fair and equitable” settlement.

Addressing his annual press conference on the sidelines of the Chinese parliament, Wang also said that some forces have always sought to stoke tensions between China and India, in an apparent reference to the US. “China and India relations have encountered some setbacks in recent years which do not serve the fundamental interests of the two countries and the two peoples,” Wang said in response to a question asked by PTI on the boundary issue and ties between the two neighbours.

“As regards the boundary question, it is left over from history. China has all along advocated managing differences through equal footing consultation and actively seeking a fair and equitable settlement and meanwhile not letting it affect or interfere with bigger picture of bilateral cooperation,” he said. China and India should be “partners rather than rivals”, said Wang, who is also the State Councillor.

Last month, External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar said that India’s relationship with China is right now going through a “very difficult phase” after Beijing violated agreements not to bring military forces to the border. Speaking at a panel discussion at the Munich Security Conference (MSC) 2022 in Germany, Jaishankar had said that India was having a problem with China along the Line of Actual Control (LAC).

Wang said some forces have always sought to stoke tension between China and India and division between regions. “Their attempts have put more and more thoughtful people in reflection and on alert,” he said. “More and more people have come to realise that for China and India, both major countries with a population of over one billion, only by staying independent can we firmly grasp our own destiny and realise our goals of development and rejuvenation,” Wang said.

Noting that China and India have a combined population of over 2.8 billion and account for one-third of humanity, and when the two countries active stability and prosperity and living in peace and harmony, global peace and prosperity will have a solid foundation, he said. “As an Indian proverb goes, help your own brother’s boat across and your own will reach the shore. We hope that India will work with China to uphold the strategic consensus that our two countries pose no threat, offer development opportunities to each other and continue to build mutual trust, avoid misunderstanding and miscalculation so that we will be partners for mutual success instead of adversaries of mutual attrition,” he said.

He said the two neighbours “must make sure that our relationship moves forward on the right track, bring more benefits to our peoples and make greater contribution to the region and the world.” He said the US’ Indo-Pacific strategy is becoming a byword for bloc politics. “It professes a desire for international cooperation, but in reality it is stoking regional rivalry. It talks about multilateralism but in reality creates exclusive clubs. It claims international rules but in reality is setting and imposing rules suiting itself and its acolytes,” he said.

The eastern Ladakh border standoff between the Indian and Chinese militaries erupted following a violent clash in the Pangong lake areas and both sides gradually enhanced their deployment by rushing in tens of thousands of soldiers as well as heavy weaponry. The tension escalated following a deadly clash in the Galwan Valley on June 15, 2020. As a result of a series of military and diplomatic talks, the two sides completed the disengagement process in Gogra as well as in the north and south banks of the Pangong lake last year.

India and China held the 14th round of Corps Commander-level meeting on January 12 during which the two sides agreed to maintain dialogue through military and diplomatic channels to work out a “mutually acceptable resolution” of the remaining issues of the standoff at eastern Ladakh.

China has described as “positive and constructive” the latest round of military-level talks with India and said Beijing will work closely with New Delhi to “properly handle” the border issue, even as it refuted the US allegation of “intimidating” neighbours.

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POST COMMENTS (2)

Kalidan Singh

Mar 08, 2022
There is only one way for anyone - any country - to have good, peaceful relationship with China. That is, do what they say, let them run rough shod over you, and fork over all that you have (including territory) when they ask. There is no other way to have a relationship with China. Jaishankar is a smart, heroic, honorable man; he cannot change China. Despite China's attempt to spend money, and help people (including our friends, the Pakistanis), they have had zero success in developing a win-win relationship with anyone. What they can either do is dominate fully as parasites, or remain afraid and subservient (as they are to Russia). India must develop economically despite the legacy of the Congress government, the endemic corruption, and our current inability to compete in open markets with premium priced, coveted products and services (although we have made some strides in exporting low-quality goods and services at very low prices, or mangoes and rice). Because, please note China thinks it can do what it wants even with relatively rich nations in the EU, and definitely seems unafraid of the US. China largely owns Australia and New Zealand. China sees India as a weak, divided nation. They do not take us seriously. We are focused fully on Ballywood and cricket to the neglect of everything else, and the hubris from our end is sky high. China has considerable experience in keeping us fully embroiled, wasting coin and blood that we cannot afford, by taking small measures that cost them nothing (such as give arms to Pakistan, play havoc on our borders, regularly encroach and provoke). I do not want misplaced expectations, our hubris about our negotiation skills to produce another 1962. The Ukrainian crisis makes plain that logistics is key to winning anything, and we still cannot get what we need to our frontier when the Chinese troops live in weather proof housing, and have a full naval force active in the glacial lakes (we have nothing of that sort). We can continue talking as long as we are sure nothing will be accomplished and China will attack when it wills, without provocation or reason.

Debajit

Mar 07, 2022
We cannot also forget that it was China that was salami slicing Indian territory over decades. The day the Chinese honour their commitments like gentlemen and resolve the border dispute with India, this will sound the end of the West's hegemony over world affairs. So its upto China to ensure relations normalise with India.

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