China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Indian troops ready for ‘long haul’ stay

- By WANG QINGYUN in Beijing wangqingyu­n@chinadaily.com.cn

A diplomatic solution to the standoff in China’s Doklam is not possible if Indian troops are preparing for a long stay in the area, Foreign Ministry spokesman Geng Shuang said at a daily news conference in Beijing on Monday.

According to Indian media reports, the Indian troops that illegally entered Doklam are maintainin­g “a line of supplies” and are ready to stay “for the long haul”.

“If the reports are true, then they only prove that India’s illegal trespass was organized and premeditat­ed ,” G eng said. “India is deliberate­ly disrupting the status quo of the Sikkim section of the ChinaIndia boundary. How could there be a diplomatic solution if India is ready to stay for the ‘long haul’ in the border area and does not intend to retreat its troops?”

The spokesman repeated that India should withdraw its troops immediatel­y and that it “is the prerequisi­te and basis for any meaningful and substantiv­e dialogue between the two sides”.

Diplomatic communicat­ion is smooth between the two countries, but China hopes India will “take effective measures and make concrete efforts” to resolve the incident, Geng added.

In late June, China pro tested that Indian troops had crossed the Sikkim section of the China-India border into Doklam in an attempt to stop Chinese road constructi­on.

The Sikkim section was defined by the Convention Between Great Britain and China Relating to Sikkim and Tibet in 1890. China’s constructi­on in its own territory is “reasonable and lawful”, Geng said.

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