IANS | 28 Mar, 2024
The 29th meeting of the Working Mechanism for Consultation and
Coordination on India-China Border Affairs was held in Beijing to
discuss and resolve the remaining issues along the Line of Actual
Control (LAC).
From the New Delhi side, the Joint Secretary (East
Asia) from the Ministry of External Affairs led the delegation, and
Beijing was represented by the Director General of the Boundary and
Oceanic Department of the Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
In
Wednesday's meeting, the two sides had an in-depth exchange of views on
how to achieve complete disengagement and resolve the remaining issues
along the LAC in the Western Sector of the India-China border areas, a
Ministry of External Affairs said in a statement on Thursday.
In
the interim, both sides agreed to maintain regular contact through
diplomatic and military channels and on the need to uphold peace and
tranquility on the ground in the border areas in accordance with
existing bilateral agreements and protocols, the statement read.
The
meeting comes as the two sides have been locked in a war of words over
the territory of Arunachal Pradesh with India saying that the
northeastern state will always remain an "integral and inalienable part"
of India.
Following the June 2020 clash of troops in Galwan
Valley, India and China have held several rounds of military talks,
seeking complete disengagement in the areas along the LAC as a basis for
restoring peace and tranquillity in the border areas.
Army Chief
General Manoj Pande has called the situation along the LAC "stable" but
"sensitive," adding that the Indian troops have been maintaining a "very
high state" of operational preparedness to deal with eventualities.
As a counter-deployment, India has amassed a large number of troops along the LAC to guard the strategically important border.
Speaking
at a gathering in Malaysia on Wednesday, External Affairs Minister
S.Jaishankar stressed on normalising troop deployment at the India-China
border.
He lashed out at China for failing to uphold long-standing agreements with India, leading to violence and bloodshed in 2020.