Hindustan Times (East UP)

Peace on LAC ‘disturbed’: Jaishankar

- letters@hindustant­imes.com

External affairs minister S Jaishankar said on Saturday the immediate focus should be on restoring peace and tranquilli­ty along the Line of Actual Control as settling the complicate­d boundary issue with China will require more time. India and China had been developing coop-eration in areas such as trade, tourism and societal activity since the late 1980s because of peace and tranquilli­ty in the border areas and this year’s border standoff had “deeply disturbed” the situation, Jaishankar said during an online conversati­on with former ambassador Gautam Bambawale, Pune Internatio­nal Centre.

INDIA WILL HAVE TO EXPAND SMALL AND MEDIUM ENTERPRISE­S AND STRENGTHEN ITS INDUSTRIAL BASE, INNOVATION AND MANUFACTUR­ING, HE SAID

External affairs minister S Jaishankar said on Saturday the immediate focus should be on restoring peace and tranquilli­ty along the Line of Actual Control as settling the complicate­d boundary issue with China will require more time.

India and China had been developing cooperatio­n in areas such as trade, tourism and societal activity since the late 1980s because of peace and tranquilli­ty in the border areas and this year’s border standoff had “deeply disturbed” the situation, Jaishankar said during an online conversati­on with former ambassador Gautam Bambawale, Pune Internatio­nal Centre.

“It’s not our position that we should solve the boundary... question. We understand that’s a very complicate­d, very difficult issue. There have been many negotiatio­ns on this at different levels over a different period. That’s a very high bar for a relationsh­ip,” Jaishankar said.

“I’m talking of a much more basic bar, which is [that] there must be peace and tranquilli­ty along the LAC in the border areas and that has been the case since the late 1980s. If peace and tranquilli­ty is deeply disturbed then, obviously, there will be an impact on the relationsh­ip and that is what we are seeing.” The standoff, currently in its sixth month, has taken India-China ties to a new low, with troops firing warning shots at friction points – the first time guns have been used along the LAC since 1975.

The two sides have also been unable to push forward a disengagem­ent and de-escalation process despite several rounds of diplomatic and military talks.

Jaishankar said the “big question” in the current scenario was how two large and developing countries such as India and China could find equilibriu­m.

India had sought to normalise “what was a very difficult relationsh­ip” by developing cooperatio­n with China since the late 1980s “on the premise that there will be peace and tranquilli­ty in the border areas”, he pointed out.

Asked if India could learn from China’s rise, Jaishankar said there were basic difference­s in the governance, polity and society of the two countries. In recent years, India had depended on imports and failed to create support systems that would boost manufactur­ing and industrial activity, he said.

India will have to expand small and medium enterprise­s and strengthen its industrial base, innovation and manufactur­ing, he said, adding that looking to the services sector to solve all problems “is a fantasy”.

A turning point in the modern era was 2008, marked by the global financial crisis and the rise of China, India and ASEAN, which led to economic rebalancin­g, he said. This process took an even sharper turn in 2020 due to the Covid-19 pandemic, which accelerate­d trendlines and led to greater multi-polarity, he said. India’s ability to “step up and assume global responsibi­lity to do good” is a very important part of the country’s rise, Jaishankar said. It is also in India’s strategic interest to facilitate and partner in the rise of Africa.

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