China Daily

FM urges India to strive for peace in border areas

- By MO JINGXI

State Councilor and Foreign Minister Wang Yi has called on India to work with China for peace and tranquilli­ty in the border areas, saying that New Delhi’s vacillatio­n and even regression over its China policy goes against the interests of both sides.

In a telephone conversati­on with Indian External Affairs Minister Subrahmany­am Jaishankar on Thursday, Wang said that the rights and wrongs of last year’s situation in China-India border areas are very clear and profound lessons should be drawn from the past.

This was the first phone call between the two ministers following their meeting in Moscow in September. The two sides agreed to establish a hotline to exchange views in a timely manner during the call.

The Indian side breached bilateral agreements and the consensus several times in the western sector of the China-India boundary last year, in an attempt to unilateral­ly change the status quo by force and encroach on China’s territory. The incident in June caused the death of four Chinese soldiers and the serious injury of a Chinese regimental commander.

Wang said that since the disengagem­ent of front line troops in the Pangong Tso Lake area had been completed recently and the situation on the ground had significan­tly eased, the two sides must cherish this hard-won progress, jointly consolidat­e the achievemen­ts and maintain the momentum of consultati­on, in order to further ease the situation.

He also urged efforts to improve the border management and control mechanism, advance the boundary negotiatio­n process and continuous­ly build mutual trust.

Experience over the past few decades has repeatedly demonstrat­ed that acts of highlighti­ng difference­s will not help resolve the issue, but will instead erode the foundation of mutual trust, Wang said.

While border disputes, as an objective reality, should receive adequate attention and be taken seriously, Wang said that the border issue is not the only factor in ChinaIndia relations and should be placed in a proper position in their ties.

Both as ancient civilizati­ons and major emerging economies that are at a critical historical period of developmen­t and revitaliza­tion, China and India should help and support each other in achieving their goals, Wang noted, adding that a continuing decline of bilateral ties only means unnecessar­y losses to both sides.

According to Wang, the two sides should adhere to the strategic consensuse­s reached by their leaders and firmly follow the right path of mutual trust and cooperatio­n. He said the two sides should not go astray due to suspicion and distrust.

Wang underlined the importance of properly handling the border issue in order to prevent bilateral ties from being trapped in a vicious cycle.

The state councilor suggested both sides work together instead of blocking each other, and join hands for developmen­t instead of building up walls.

The two countries can take an easy-to-difficult, step-by-step approach to improving ties and promoting pragmatic cooperatio­n, Wang added.

Jaishankar said that India hopes to strengthen dialogue and consultati­on with China in order to complete the early disengagem­ent of troops in other regions, push for the de-escalation of border tensions and maintain peace and tranquilli­ty in the border areas.

The recent disengagem­ent in the Pangong Tso Lake area is an important outcome of the two sides’ earnest implementa­tion of the consensus reached by the two foreign ministers in Moscow, he said.

India is willing to act in the interests of the long-term developmen­t of India-China relations and implement the important consensuse­s reached by leaders of both countries, Jaishankar added.

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