Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

"No need for a third party in border dispute," India, China respond to Trump

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NEW DELHI/ BEIJING, May 29 (REUTERS) - China said there was no need for a third party to mediate between China and India in an ongoing border dispute, when asked about US President Donald Trump's offer to mediate.

Foreign ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian made the comments at the daily briefing Friday.

India is in talks with China to deal with the most serious military standoff on their disputed border in recent years, India's Foreign Ministry said on Thursday, sidesteppi­ng US President Donald Trump's offer to mediate.

Soldiers have been facing off in the remote Ladakh region in the Himalayas since early May, accusing each other of trespassin­g and in recent days they have dug in defences and brought equipment.

Trump said in a Twitter post the United States had told India and China that it was ready to arbitrate their “raging border dispute”, the first time he has tried to throw himself into IndiaChina diplomacy.

“We are engaged with the Chinese side to peacefully resolve this issue,” Indian Foreign Ministry spokesman Anurag Srivastava told reporters, responding to Trump's offer.

The dispute is the most serious since India and China, who fought a brief border war in 1962, were locked in a similar faceoff in the eastern Himalayas that lasted nearly three months in 2017.

Srivastava said India wanted peace and stability at the border but would defend its territory.

Despite talks spread over two decades, the two countries have not been able to settle their 3,500-km border and lay claim to large tracts of remote territory in each other's possession.

“Our troops have taken a responsibl­e approach towards border management and are following protocols,” Srivastava said.

Military observers say one likely reason for the renewed border tensions is India's effort to build new air strips and roads near the de-facto border to try to narrow the gap with China's superior infrastruc­ture.

Despite ongoing talks between the local military commanders and diplomats, there is no sign of a de-escalation, Indian sources aware of the situation said.

New Delhi says Chinese troops have intruded into Indian territory and must withdraw to defuse the crisis. The Chinese side wants India to stop all constructi­on activity in the area, saying the whole area is disputed, one of the sources said.

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