Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

‘No talks till troops withdraw’

CHINA’S STAND Ahead of NSA’s visit, neighbour says dialogue on Donglang will happen only if India recalls its troops

- Sutirtho Patranobis sutirtho.patranobis@htlive.com

› Once again, we urge India to pull back to the Indian side of the boundary . ... this is the preconditi­on for any talks between the two sides LU KANG , foreign ministry spokespers­on

BEIJING: A “meaningful” dialogue on the Donglang standoff between National Security Adviser Ajit Doval and top Chinese diplomat Yang Jiechi is unlikely though they could meet for talks when the Indian official visits Beijing for a BRICS security summit this week, China indicated on Monday.

Doval will be in Beijing for a meeting of BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa) high representa­tives for security issues during July 27-28.

“On bilateral meetings, I do not have the relevant informatio­n right now. As far as we know, in previous meetings, usually it is arranged for the heads of delegation­s to hold meets to exchange views on bilateral relations and other internatio­nal issues,” foreign ministry spokespers­on Lu Kang said.

Lu, however, was quick to put a question mark on a discussion between Doval and Yang, the head of the Chinese delegation for the BRICS meeting, on the faceoff between Indian and Chinese troops at Doklam. The pre-condition for any such discussion, he made it clear, is the withdrawal of Indian troops to the Indian side of the Sikkim boundary.

“The crux now is Indian border troops illegally stayed on China’s territory. Once again, we urge India to pull back to the Indian side of the boundary. I want to stress that this is the preconditi­on for any meaningful talks between the two sides,” Lu said. This despite the fact that “China and India have a smooth diplomatic channel”, he said.

In New Delhi, there was no official reaction to Lu’s comments from the external affairs ministry. Lu also hinted that India has the responsibi­lity for initiating dialogue on the standoff, which has entered its second month.

“China hopes to maintain peace and stability of border areas, but China will not make any compromise on sovereignt­y and territoria­l integrity,” he said. “The responsibi­lity lies completely with India and we hope India can get a clear understand­ing of the situation and can take swift and correct measures to avoid escalation of the situation.”

Asked about Australian foreign minister Julie Bishop’s comments in India calling for a peaceful resolution to territoria­l issues, Lu said her comments were “correct” but “this principle does not apply to the current standoff as there is no dispute in the Doklam region”.

Beijing has contended that an 1890 treaty between British India and the then ruling Qing dynasty in China had demarcated the Sikkim boundary. Lu said the security summit later this week is a platform for BRICS countries to “strengthen strategic communicat­ion, increase political mutual trust as well as discuss hotspot issues”. Doval and Yang also currently lead the “special representa­tives” mechanism for talks between India and China on the boundary issue. As many as 19 rounds of talks have been held between the two sides under the mechanism.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India