Dr Jaishankar on India-China talks on eastern Ladakh row

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Dr Jaishankar on India-China talks on eastern Ladakh row



GENEVA: Roughly 75 per cent of the “disengagement problems” with China are sorted out but the bigger issue has been the increasing militarisation of the frontier, External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar said on Thursday on the lingering border row in eastern Ladakh.In an interactive session at a think-tank in this Swiss city, Jaishankar said the Galwan Valley clashes of June 2020 affected the “entirety” of India-China ties, asserting that one cannot have violence at the border and then say the rest of the relationship is insulated from it.The external affairs minister said both sides have been engaged in negotiations for the last four years to find a solution to the outstanding issues.”Now those negotiations are going on. We made some progress. I would say roughly you can say about 75 per cent of the disengagement problems are sorted out,” he said at the Geneva Centre for Security Policy.”We still have some things to do,” Jaishankar, who is on a two-day visit to Switzerland, said.But there is a bigger issue that both of us have brought forces close up and in that sense there is a militarisation of the border, he said.”How does one deal with it? I think we have to deal with it. In the meanwhile, after the clash, it has affected the entirety of the relationship because you cannot have violence at the border and then say the rest of the relationship is insulated from it,” he said.The external affairs minister indicated that the relationship can improve if there is a resolution to the row.”We hope that if there is a solution to the disengagement and there is a return to peace and tranquility, then we can look at other possibilities,” he said.The Indian and Chinese militaries have been locked in a standoff since May 2020 and a full resolution of the border row has not yet been achieved though the two sides have disengaged from a number of friction points following a series of talks.The ties between the two countries nosedived significantly following the fierce clash in the Galwan Valley in June 2020 that marked the most serious military conflict between the two sides in decades.India has been maintaining that its ties with China cannot be normal unless there is peace in the border areas.Describing India-China relations as “complex”, Jaishankar said the ties were kind of normalised in the late 1980s and the basis for it was that there would be peace at the border.”The basis obviously for a good relationship, I would say even for a normal relationship, was that there would be peace and tranquility in the border. After things started to take a better turn in 1988, we had a series of agreements which stabilised the border,” he said.”What happened in 2020 was in violation of multiple agreements for some reasons which is still entirely not clear to us; we can speculate on it.” “The Chinese actually moved a very large number of troops to the Line of Actual Control at the border and naturally in response we moved our troops up. It was very difficult for us because we were in the middle of a Covid lockdown at that time,” he said.



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