INDIA - India and China should view each other as "partners" rather than "adversaries or threats", Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi said on Monday,...
as he arrived for a two-day visit to Delhi. Wang met with Indian Foreign Minister S Jaishankar - only the second such meeting between the two sides since 2020 - when deadly clashes in the Galwan valley in Ladakh, a disputed Himalayan border region, led to a complete breakdown of ties between the countries. Relations are now on a "positive trend" towards cooperation, Wang said ahead of a meeting with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Tuesday. Jaishankar said that India and China were seeking to "move ahead from a difficult period in our ties".
The two counterparts held discussions on a range of bilateral issues from trade to pilgrimages and river data sharing. Wang also met India's National Security Advisor Ajit Doval on Tuesday for on-going negotiations on resolving the boundary dispute between the two countries. "We are happy to share that stability has now been restored at the borders," Wang said during the delegation-level meeting with Doval. "The setbacks that we faced in the last few years were not in our interest," he said. The visit is being seen as the latest sign of a thaw in ties between the nuclear-armed neighbours. India and China had agreed on patrolling arrangements to de-escalate tensions along the disputed Himalayan border in October last year. (BBC)