Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

‘China ties passing through bad patch’

- Rezaul H Laskar letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: India-China relations are currently passing through a “particular­ly bad patch” and India’s interests are better served with a closer relationsh­ip with the US and Europe, external affairs minister S Jaishankar said on Friday.

In a reference to the standoff in the Ladakh sector of the Line of Actual Control (LAC), Jaishankar said the downturn in ties was due to China’s actions that had violated bilateral pacts, and that he had conveyed to his Chinese counterpar­t Wang Yi during recent meetings where New Delhi stands on the relationsh­ip with Beijing.

“We are going through a particular­ly bad patch in our relationsh­ip because they have taken a set of actions in violation of agreements for which they still don’t have a credible explanatio­n and that appears to indicate some rethink about where they want to take our relationsh­ip, but that’s for them to answer,” he said at a panel discussion on the theme “Greater power competitio­n: The emerging world order” at the Bloomberg New Economic Forum in Singapore.

“I don’t think the Chinese have any doubt on where we stand on our relationsh­ip and what’s not gone right with it. I’ve been meeting my counterpar­t Wang Yi a number of times.

As you would’ve experience­d, I speak fairly clear, reasonably understand­ably [and] there is no lack of clarity. So if they want to hear it, I am sure they would have heard it,” Jaishankar said in his reply to a question on whether China was aware of how it had mishandled relations with India.

Jaishankar has said in the past that China had offered no credible explanatio­n for the massing of troops on the LAC and the standoff that began in May last year.

India has blamed China’s unilateral efforts to change the status quo on the disputed border for the face-off, which resulted in the first fatalities on the LAC since 1975.

Twenty Indian soldiers and at least four Chinese troops were killed in a brutal clash in Galwan Valley in June last year. Though the two sides pulled back frontline troops at Pangong Lake and Gogra after several rounds of talks, there has been no headway in disengagem­ent at other friction points since August. India has also linked the normalisat­ion of overall ties with China to the resolution of the standoff.

In response to another question at the discussion, which was also joined by former US secretary of state Hillary Clinton and former UK prime minister Tony Blair, Jaishankar said India’s interests are better served “with a much closer relationsh­ip with the US, with a much stronger relationsh­ip with Europe and the UK, with a...re-energising of our relationsh­ip with Asean, especially Singapore”.

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