Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Can’t be business as usual: Foreign secy on China ties

- Rezaul H Laskar rezaul.laskar@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: The situation along the Line of Actual Control (LAC) is “unpreceden­ted” and it “cannot be business as usual” in the relationsh­ip with China until the status quo is restored on the disputed border, foreign secretary Harsh Shringla said on Friday.

The standoff on the LAC is one of the most serious challenges India has faced in several decades and the current “magnitude of amassing of forces” on the border has not been witnessed in recent years, Shringla said while speaking on the theme of Indian diplomacy amid the Covid-19 pandemic during a lecture organised by the Indian Council of World Affairs (ICWA).

“We have had an unpreceden­ted situation on the IndiaChina border, we have never had this sort of situation since 1962. We have lost the lives of soldiers which has not happened in the last 40 years,” he said, referring to the brief but bitter border war fought almost six decades ago.

“We have also seen that there has been an attempt to take unilateral action that seems to be an effort to change facts on the ground. We will be firm and resolute in resisting this... there will be no compromise on our sovereignt­y and territoria­l integrity,” Shringla said hours ahead of a planned meeting between the Indian and Chinese defence ministers on the margins of a Shanghai Cooperatio­n Organisati­on (SCO) meet in Moscow.

Though India remains willing to talk with China and has kept the lines of communicat­ion open amid the pandemic, Shringla warned that it “cannot be business as usual unless there is peace and tranquilli­ty in our border areas.

The normal bilateral relationsh­ip will be affected. There is a linkage between what is happening on the border and our larger relationsh­ip and that fact is very, very evident.”

The only way to take things forward will be “revert to the status quo that existed before such aggressive actions took place” and to de-escalate and disengage front-line troops, he said.

India have held several rounds of talks at the military and diplomatic level and even contacts between the two foreign ministers and Special Representa­tives on border issues haven’t led to a breakthrou­gh since the standoff emerged in the open in May. Following a fresh face-off on the south bank of Pangong Lake, there have been four rounds on inconclusi­ve talks between brigade commanders on the ground.

He also focused on how India’s foreign policy is coping with the challenges brought on by the pandemic, which he described as “perhaps the greatest shock to the internatio­nal system since World War 2”.

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