Modi, Xi vow to build trust, safeguard peace at border
AFTER DOKLAM PM tweets satisfaction over fruitful talks with China premier
Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Chinese president Xi Jinping agreed on Tuesday that more must be done to improve mutual trust and avoid border standoffs, as they sought to mend ties damaged by a two-month-long military faceoff on an icy Himalayan plateau.
The two spoke for more than an hour after the Brics nations summit, a meeting described by Indian foreign secretary S Jaishankar as a “forward looking conversation” that recognised that peace along the border was a prerequisite for better ties.
Talks between Xi and Modi had been in question after Chinese and Indian troops faced off in the Doklam border region, their most serious military confrontation in decades that ended last week.
“It is natural that between neighbours and large powers there would be areas of difference. But where there is an area of difference, it should be handled with mutual respect and efforts should be made to find common ground,” Jaishankar said.
“On both sides there was a sense that more efforts need to be made to ensure that these kinds of situations don’t reoccur.”
Jaishankar said the two leaders affirmed that “peace and tranquility in the border areas was a prerequisite for the further development of our relationship and that there should be more effort made to really enhance and strengthen the level of mutual trust between the two sides”.
In response, Xi told Modi that healthy, stable ties were in the interest of both countries, a statement from China’s foreign ministry said. “China is willing to work with India ... to increase political trust, advance mutually beneficial cooperation and promote the further development of China-India relations along the correct path,” it said.
The two sides agreed that Chinese and Indian defence and security personnel must maintain strong contact and cooperation to prevent future border standoffs.
The trouble in Doklam, known as “Donglang” in Chinese, started when Chinese soldiers started to extend a road, prompting India to deploy troops to stop the construction.
Doklam is claimed by both Bhutan and China. India does not claim Doklam for itself but is closely allied with Bhutan, which it regards as a buffer against China.
Meanwhile, Islamabad on Tuesday rejected a Brics statement that militant groups in Pakistan, including Lashkar-e-Taiba and Jaish-e-Mohammed, pose a regional security concern, with its defence minister Khurram Dastagir Khan saying no group operates freely inside Pakistan.