The Star Malaysia

China wants to mend ties with India

Beijing seeks to resolve border dispute with New Delhi

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Xi wants to pursue ‘healthy, stable’ relationsh­ip after border dispute.

Xiamen: Chinese President Xi Jinping sought to move past a tense border dispute with India, telling Prime Minister Narendra Modi the two nuclear-armed neighbours should pursue “healthy, stable” relations, according to China’s state media.

The exchange occurred on the sidelines of the just-ended summit of BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa) emerging economies hosted by Xi in the southeaste­rn Chinese city of Xiamen yesterday.

Xi told Modi that “healthy, stable bilateral ties” were “in line with the fundamenta­l interests” of the neighbours, the official Xinhua news agency said.

“China is willing to work with India on the basis of the Five Principles of Peaceful Coexistenc­e, which were put forward by both countries to improve political mutual trust, promote mutually beneficial cooperatio­n, and push Sino-Indian ties along a right track,” the report quoted him as saying.

An Indian foreign ministry spokesman also tweeted that the two leaders had a “constructi­ve and forward-looking” talk.

Armed forces of the two countries engaged in a bitter, weeks-long mili-

China is willing to work with India to improve mutual trust, promote cooperatio­n and push ties along the right track. Xi Jinping

tary confrontat­ion in a disputed and strategica­lly important Himalayan area.

The contested area, Doklam, is claimed by both China and Bhutan, an ally of India.

The stand-off began on June 16 when Chinese troops started building a road in the area.

India deployed troops to stop the constructi­on project, prompting Beijing to accuse it of trespassin­g on Chinese soil and sparking one of the worst crises in decades between the two countries, which have a history of mistrust.

The confrontat­ion dragged on as China repeatedly demanded India withdraw its troops before any proper negotiatio­n could take place, while India countered that both sides should withdraw their forces together.

They backed off only last week, possibly to prevent the dispute from marring the summit of the five-nation BRICS.

The summit had been carefully stage-managed by hosts China to project an image of developing-world solidarity.

New Delhi announced early last week that both countries were pulling back their border forces, while Beijing said only that India had withdrawn “all its border personnel and equipment that were illegally on the Chinese territory”.

Afterwards, Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi said Beijing “hopes the Indian side will learn lessons from this incident and prevent similar things from happening again”.

India does not claim Doklam for itself but is closely allied with Bhutan, which it regards as a buffer against rival China to the north.

India and China have a long history of mistrust and went to war in 1962 over the Indian state of Arunachal Pradesh.

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 ?? — Reuters ?? Forging new paths: (From left) Russian President Vladimir Putin, Xi and Modi arriving for the BRICS summit in Xiamen, Fujian Province.
— Reuters Forging new paths: (From left) Russian President Vladimir Putin, Xi and Modi arriving for the BRICS summit in Xiamen, Fujian Province.

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