Deccan Chronicle

China unusually aggressive: India Foreign secretary tells parliament­ary panel situation is still not complicate­d

- DC CORRESPOND­ENT NEW DELHI, JULY 18

Foreign secretary S. Jaishankar reportedly told a parliament­ary panel on Tuesday that China’s stand on the recent Dokalam dispute in the Sikkim sector has been unusually aggressive.

However, Mr. Jais-hankar, who was briefing the panel on external affairs, maintained that New Delhi is engaged with Beijing in defusing tension through diplomatic channels. According to some TV reports, Mr Jaishankar had advocated a “Deep Breath, Stop and Engage” policy as a way of resolving the matter, indicating that both countries would have to talk it out.

There were also TV reports that Congress vice-president and Lok Sabha member Rahul Gandhi raised certain questions at the meeting of the panel of which he is a member.

According to reports, Mr Gandhi apparently asked questions about the Chinese intentions and the Indo-Bhutanese special relationsh­ip.

“Jaishankar told us that China’s aggression and rhetoric on the recent standoff is unusual but it is not that complicate­d as it is being projected in some quarters. We will continue to engage with them through diplomatic channels,” one of the MPs in the panel was quoted by news agency as saying.

The foreign secretary told the panel that India has clearly outlined its position on the border and Chinese have their own position, but they are misinterpr­eting it and so India was trying to clarify it.

He said that India has been maintainin­g the same position since 1895 as per an Anglo-Chinese agreement.

Foreign secretary S. Jaishankar reportedly told a parliament­ary panel on Tuesday that China’s stand on the recent Dokalam dispute in the Sikkim sector has been unusually aggressive.

The words like “warlike situation or conflict” were not used by the foreign secretary as he stuck to the word stand-off to describe the current situation at Doklam, another members said.

Both members spoke on condition of anonymity because of the confidenti­al nature of the meeting.

Meanwhile, the Chinese foreign ministry in Beijing said India should not use “trespass” into the Doklam area as a “policy tool” to achieve its “political targets”, and asked New Delhi to immediatel­y withdraw its troops to avoid any escalation.

Chinese and Indian soldiers have been locked in a face-off for over a month after Indian troops stopped the Chinese army from building a road in the Doklam area of Bhutan which China claims as its territory.

“Since the illegal trespass by Indian border personnel, many foreign diplomats in China felt shocked about this and (wanted) to confirm whether it was true,” Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Lu Kang said in Beijing when asked about the reported briefing by China there last week to foreign missions. “The Chinese side maintains close communicat­ion with the foreign diplomatic missions on the issues they are interested,” Kang told reporters in the Chinese Capital.

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