Millennium Post (Kolkata)

‘Peace important for economic engagement’

India has to continue to work on the economic relationsh­ip with neighbouri­ng country: Shringla

- OUR CORRESPOND­ENT

NEW DELHI: India has always stressed in interactio­ns with Chinese interlocut­ors that a normal bilateral relationsh­ip is contingent on peace and tranquilli­ty in the border areas, Foreign Secretary Harsh Vardhan Shringla said on Sunday.

Underlinin­g that China is the second-largest economy in the world and India has a large trade profile with it, Shringla said clearly India has to continue to work on the economic relationsh­ip with the neighbouri­ng country, but it has to be calibrated based on the progress on important issues that are critical to both countries politicall­y.

Talking about the "recent disturbanc­es" on the IndiaChina border areas in Eastern Ladakh, Shringla, while speaking at a session of the Asia Economic Dialogue, said, "We in our interactio­ns with our Chinese interlocut­ors have always made the point that a normal bilateral relationsh­ip is contingent upon peace and tranquilit­y in the border areas."

This is a sine qua non (absolutely necessary) and this is something both sides have accepted as part of their treaty obligation­s, Shringla said at an online session of the Dialogue organised by the Pune Internatio­nal Centre.

"Now as we disengage and as there is some forward movement in the resolution of some of the recent border friction points...obviously we have to see what else is required," he said. "It is a very long border that we have with China and we are only talking about one small point on the border.

"We are trying to now see whether we can apply similar principles in sorting out some of the other areas which are in the Ladakh sector, some other sectors that we are talking about, and to see how else we can move forward on the issue of managing our long but contentiou­s border with China in a manner that allows both countries to sort of maintain a level of semblance of normalcy," the foreign secretary said.

The border standoff in Eastern Ladakh between the Indian and Chinese armies erupted on May 5 last year following a violent clash in the Pangong Lake area and both sides gradually enhanced their deployment by rushing in tens of thousands of soldiers as well as heavy weaponry. Earlier this month, the armies of the two countries concluded the withdrawal of troops and weapons from the north and south banks of Pangong Tso in the high-altitude region.

Shringla said the resolution of the outstandin­g issues was a "work in progress" and has had an impact on the economic ties, he said.

On the economic aspect of the ties, Shringla said the important point is that whatever one does, China is the second-largest economy in the world and India has a large trade profile with it.

"Clearly, we have to continue to work on the economic relationsh­ip but it has to be calibrated based on peace and tranquilli­ty and progress on important issues that are critical to both countries politicall­y," he said.

Noting that China is India's largest trading partner in terms of goods, the foreign secretary said the balance of trade is very much skewed in favour of China.

"We have carried quite a heavy trade imbalance for over a number of years. Over time this has increasing­ly seemed as being unsustaina­ble," he said.

Speaking about India's ties with the US, Shringla said India has had an element of continuity on this front and there is a range of areas to collaborat­e.

On India's COVID-19 vaccines supply, Shringla said, “We've received a number of messages from Africa, the Gulf, the Bahamas and in particular our own neighborho­od about their gratitude for the deadly Coronaviru­s vaccines. This reveals the generosity of India and its unrivaled position in global and health supply chains.”

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