Khaleej Times

China keen to have cordial India talks

- Reuters

beijing — China on Wednesday sought to cast its strained ties with India in a positive light ahead of a likely meeting next week between President Xi Jinping and Prime Minister Narendra Modi following their most serious military confrontat­ion in decades.

The countries agreed this week to end a more than two-month-old stand-off on their disputed Himalayan border, just in time for the start on Sunday of a summit of the BRICS grouping of nations, which also includes Brazil, Russia and South Africa.

It was normal for the two neighbours to have difference­s, Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi told a news briefing.

“What’s important is that we put these problems in the appropriat­e place, and appropriat­ely handle and control them in the spirit of mutual respect and based on the consensus of both countries’ leaders,” he said.

What’s important is that we put these problems in the appropriat­e place, and appropriat­ely handle and control them in the spirit of mutual respect and based on the consensus of both countries’ leaders, Wang Yi, Chinese Foreign Minister

“There is huge potential for cooperatio­n between China and India,” Wang added, without giving details.

Xi and Modi are expected to hold talks on the summit sidelines in the southeaste­rn city of Xiamen, officials in New Delhi said.

That has raised hopes they will try and repair a relationsh­ip that has deteriorat­ed as the two countries find their interests diverge — and often clash — while competing for influence across Asia.

Neither country should claim victory after the stand-off, said former Indian foreign secretary Nirupama Rao, an expert on relations with China.

“The forthcomin­g summit can provide an opportunit­y to begin that restoratio­n process when the leaders of the two countries meet,” Rao said. “Diplomatic and not military manoeuvres must be the name of the game in this relationsh­ip.”

Hundreds of troops were deployed on the Doklam plateau, near the borders of India, its ally Bhutan, and China after New Delhi objected to China building a road through the mountainou­s area.

The quiet diplomacy that ultimately ended in de-escalation was based on a principle of stopping “difference­s becoming disputes” that Modi and Xi had agreed in Astana in June, an Indian official with knowledge of the matter said.

Still, ties remain strained over the disputed frontier and India is deeply suspicious of China’s growing military activities in and around the Indian Ocean.

For its part, Modi’s government has upset China with its public embrace of Tibetan spiritual leader Dalai Lama, whom the Chinese regard as a dangerous separatist, and growing military ties with the United States and Japan.

China has said its forces will continue to patrol in Doklam, which is claimed by Bhutan. Wang said he hoped India had learned a lesson from the incident.

Chinese road constructi­on had stopped and equipment removed, said a second government official in New Delhi aware of the situation.

But it was not clear whether China had given an assurance not to resume constructi­on in a territory New Delhi says is too close for comfort for the security of its northeast. —

 ?? AP ?? Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Chinese President Xi Jinping will meet next week. —
AP Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Chinese President Xi Jinping will meet next week. —

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