China on Monday announced it would hold high-level talks later this week with India on their border disputes – the first such discussions in five years, signalling a possible thaw in frosty ties.
Relations had been tense since a deadly military encounter in 2020 on the border between Tibet and India’s Ladakh region, which left at least 20 Indian and four Chinese soldiers dead.
In October, New Delhi said it had reached an agreement with Beijing on patrols in disputed areas along their common border.
Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi will meet with Indian National Security Advisor Ajit Doval on Wednesday in Beijing on the “China-India boundary question,” foreign ministry spokesman Lin Jian said in a statement
The talks will be held in the framework of a negotiations mechanism created in 2003 to handle the thorny issue.
The last such meeting took place in December 2019, according to Indian media.
The October agreement was reached shortly before a rare formal meeting – also the first in five years – between Chinese President Xi Jinping and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, on the sidelines of a BRICS summit in Russia.
China and India, the world’s two most populous nations, are intense rivals and have accused each other of trying to seize territory along their unofficial divide, known as the Line of Actual Control.
The shared 3,500-kilometre (2,200-mile) frontier has been a perennial source of tension between the nuclear-armed neighbours.India and China must resolve friction along their border, pull back troops and avoid “restrictive trade measures” to normalise their relationship, India’s foreign minister told his Chinese counterpart in Beijing on Monday.
India’s Subrahmanyam Jaishankar met Wang Yi in Beijing during his first trip to the country since 2020, when a deadly border clash between their troops led to a four-year military standoff and damaged ties until a thaw began in October, when they agreed to step back.
“Good progress” made by the countries in the past nine months for normalisation of relations is a result of the resolution of friction along their border, Jaishankar told Wang.
India and China share a 3,800 km (2,400 miles) border that is poorly demarcated and has been disputed since the 1950s
They fought a brief but brutal border war in 1962 and talks over the decades to settle the border dispute have made slow progress.
Last month, Indian Defence Minister Rajnath Singh told his Chinese counterpart that the two countries should seek a “permanent solution” to the border dispute, seen as a new push by New Delhi for a conclusive outcome.
“It is now incumbent on us to address other aspects related to the border, including de-escalation,” Jaishankar said, adding that it was also critical that restrictive trade measures and roadblocks be avoided to foster mutually beneficial cooperation.
The minister was speaking in the backdrop of Beijing’s restrictions in recent months on supplies of critical minerals such as rare earth magnets and machinery for manufacturing of high-tech goods.
India holds the world’s fifth-largest rare earth reserves but its domestic output remains underdeveloped.
There was no immediate Chinese readout of the talks between Jaishankar and Wang.
Jaishankar, who is in China to attend the meeting of foreign ministers of the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation, met Chinese Vice President Han Zheng earlier in the day, the official Chinese news agency Xinhua reported.
India and China should steadily advance practical cooperation and respect each other’s concerns, Han told Jaishankar, Xinhua said.
