Foreign Minister S Jaishankar recently said that China did not follow the agreements with India on border issues and tried to unilaterally change the Line of Actual Control and that is why there is a tense situation between the two neighbors.
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new foreign minister of china qin gang Responding to the statement of India Has reiterated that it is in favor of maintaining peace in the border areas. In fact, the Chinese Foreign Minister remarked that line of actual control Both sides are keen to reduce the deadlock on (LAC).
When asked about Chinese Foreign Minister Qin Gang’s comments in an article written last month, Foreign Ministry spokesman Arindam Bagchi said that you are aware of India’s long-standing position. Ensuring peace in the border areas is essential for the development of our relationship. Therefore, bilateral agreements have to be followed and unilateral efforts to change the status quo of the border have to be avoided.
In an article titled ‘How China sees the world’ for the US magazine ‘The National Interest’, Qin wrote that the status quo as to the border issues between China and India is that the two sides are determined to defuse the standoff and jointly resolve their Willing to protect peace on the borders. He wrote this article before becoming the foreign minister.
China tried to unilaterally change LAC: Jaishankar
Foreign Minister S Jaishankar recently said that China did not follow the agreements with India on border issues and tried to unilaterally change the Line of Actual Control and that is why there is a tense situation between the two neighbors. In an interview to Austrian national broadcaster ORF, Jaishankar said that India and China have reached an agreement not to have large-scale security forces in the border areas.
He said in response to a question that although China did not follow those agreements, and that is the reason why there is a tense situation between us at present. We had an agreement not to change the LAC unilaterally, which they (China) have tried to change unilaterally.
In response to the question of what will happen if China also says that India did not follow the agreements, Jaishankar said that it is difficult for Beijing to say because the record is very clear. Today, satellite images are much clearer. If we see who first sent troops to the border areas, I think the record is very clear. So, what you said, it is very difficult to say for China.
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