Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

Doklam : China dismisses Japan’s support for India

Accuses India of trying to change status quo illegally

- Sutirtho Patranobis spatranobi­s@htlive.com

BEIJING: It is India, and not China, which has attempted to change the status quo in Doklam area near the Sikkim border, the Chinese foreign ministry said on Friday, dismissing Japan’s expression of support for India’s stance as factually incorrect. ››

BEIJING: It is India, and not China, which has attempted to change the status quo in Doklam area near the Sikkim border, the foreign ministry said on Friday, dismissing Japan’s expression of support for India’s stance as factually incorrect.

The Japanese envoy to India, Kenji Hiramatsu, told HT on Thursday that no country should use unilateral force to alter the status of the Do kl am or Dong lang region, which is under Chinese control but claimed by Bhutan.

Foreign ministry spoke sp ersonHu aC hun ying dismissed Hiramatsu’s statement as uninformed .“I have seen that the Japanese ambassador to India really wants to support India (on the military standoff.) And I want to remind him not to randomly make comments before clarifying relevant facts,” Hua said.

“In Do kl am, there is no territoria­l dispute. The boundary has been de limited and recognised by both sides. The attempt to change the status quo illegal ly is by India, not China,” she said.

The Japanese envoy had said in response to a question on the standoff: “We recognise Doklam is a disputed area between Bhutan and China and two countries are engaged in border talks… We also understand that India has a treaty understand­ing with Bhutan, that’s why Indian troops got involved in the area.”

Hua reiterated China’s demand that India should withdraw its border troops unconditio­nally, saying this was a preconditi­on for any meaningful talks between the two sides. China has blamed India for the impasse at Doklam, and accused Indian soldiers of trespass and preventing Chinese soldiers from building a road in the region. India says the road, if built, will have serious security implicatio­ns. The Indian troops intervened in coordinati­on with the Bhutan government when Chinese forces tried to build the road in mid-June. n

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