New Delhi: Following a meeting between the Minister of External Affairs S Jaishankar and Chinese partner Wang Yi in Dushanbe, China on Thursday said it was ready to find a “acceptable solution” with problems that require “urgent treatment” but adding its troops not “.
Responsible Answer for the current deadlock and that the two countries needed to maintain border problems in “appropriate place”.
While India has repeatedly said that the release of LAC, and de-escalation, is very important for improvement in relation, Beijing confirms that border disputes are not It can be permitted to prevent the development of bilateral relations as a whole.
With China apparently dragging her feet when releasing in the remaining area in East Ladakh, Jaishankar has conveyed to Wang that border disputes “impact” negatively Akat to return from the position taken in the finger area of Pangong Lake.
In the reading of his meeting, the Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs said Wang had told Jaishankar that India-Chinese relations remained at “low points” while the situation on the border had “generally subsided” after withdrawal of troops from Galwan Valley and Pantong Lake.
However, the relationship between India and China is still at a low point that is not interested in anyone, Wang said.
While again blaming India to stand out, Wang said, “China is ready to find a solution that can be accepted together for problems that require urgent care through negotiations and consultations with India”.
However, China reflects the important parts of India’s statement, with Wang quoting saying, “It is important to consolidate the achievement of release, strictly with agreements and consensus between the two parties, refraining from taking unilateral actions in sensitive.
The disputed area, and avoiding recurrence of the situation due to misunderstanding and misjudged “.
“We need to take a long-term view, shift from emergency management to normal border management and control mechanisms, and prevent incidents related to borders to cause unnecessary disturbances to bilateral relations,” he added.
Wang was also quoted as saying that the relationship between China-India should not be a threat to each other, but the opportunity to develop with each other.
“The two countries are partners, not rivals, and not enemies.
The principles of China-India relations must continue to respect each other to the integrity of sovereignty and territorial, non-aggression, non-interference in …
internal affairs …” he said.