Chinese foreign ministry Hua Chunying: Common efforts needed to maintain good ties with India

“Beijing is committed to resolving the border standoff through dialogue but was also determined to safeguard its territorial sovereignty”, she added.

Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson Hua Chunying said,“common efforts were needed to maintain good relations between China and India" while reacting to External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar's remarks - That China has given India "five differing explanations" for deploying large forces at the Line of Actual Control (LAC) and the violation of bilateral pacts has "very significantly damaged" their relationship.

“Beijing is committed to resolving the border standoff through dialogue but was also determined to safeguard its
territorial sovereignty”, she added.

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The comments were made by S. Jaishankar on Wednesday during an online interactive session organised by Australian think tank Lowy Institute that came against the backdrop of over seven-month-long military standoff between India and China at the LAC in eastern Ladakh. 

"China and India are neighbours and the world's two biggest emerging markets and keeping good relations serves the fundamental interests of both countries and its people but it requires common efforts from both sides," Hua underlined at a regular Chinese foreign ministry briefing here.

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"The merits of the situation at the border area is very clear and the responsibility totally lies with the Indian side. China has been strictly observing the agreements signed between the two sides and committed to resolving the border issue through dialogue and we are committed to safeguarding regional peace and tranquillity at border areas," she said.
"In the meantime, we are determined in safeguarding our territorial sovereignty," she said in response to a question at the briefing.

Asked to elaborate on the common efforts needed to defuse the current standoff at the border, the spokesperson said, "Like all sovereign states we are determined in safeguarding our territorial integrity. So on the Indian side, I think this is a serious question on what it should reflect upon. There are challenges in bilateral relations but China's position and the policy on India hasn't changed."

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As two major countries and emerging markets, "keeping good relations serves the fundamental interests of both and we will stay committed to safeguarding the peace and tranquillity in the border area," she said.
"On the historical issues, China believes that we should find fair, reasonable and mutually acceptable solutions based on equal-footed consultation and put it on the proper position in our bilateral relations. We hope we can reach consensus, properly manage differences, enhance practical cooperation and bring our bilateral relations back on the right track," Hua said.

The two countries have held eight rounds of Corps Commander-level talks to resolve the military standoff in eastern Ladakh. However the talks have not yielded any concrete outcome yet to ease the border tensions.

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