MEA
spokesperson Anurag Srivastava told a virtual news briefing that both sides are
engaged at different levels to address tensions, but New Delhi will make no
compromises on sovereignty and national security.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi with
US President Donald Trump(Reuters file photo)
India on Thursday said it is
engaged with China at the diplomatic and military levels to end a border
standoff involving thousands of troops even as it tacitly ruled out any
possibility of US mediation to end the face-off.
Since tensions flared along the Line of Actual Control
(LAC) after violent clashes involving hundreds of soldiers in Sikkim and Ladakh
sectors early this month, both sides have deployed additional soldiers,
especially in Galwan Valley in eastern Ladakh. India has said it will oppose
any unilateral attempts to alter the status quo along the LAC.
Faced with a flurry of questions on the standoff and
whether India agreed with China’s characterisation of the situation as “stable
and controllable”, external affairs ministry spokesperson Anurag Srivastava
told a virtual news briefing that both sides are engaged at different levels to
address tensions, but New Delhi will make no compromises on sovereignty and
national security.
Asked
specifically about US President Donald Trump’s offer on Wednesday to mediate
between the India and China and whether New Delhi had sought such arbitration,
Srivastava appeared to rule out any role for a third party by saying: “As I’ve
told you, we are engaged with the Chinese side to peacefully resolve this
issue.”
India and China, he said,
have established mechanisms at military and diplomatic levels to peacefully
resolve situations that may arise in border areas through dialogue, and
“continue to remain engaged through these channels”.
Srivastava reiterated India’s contention that its troops
had not violated the LAC, a charge levelled by China soon after the standoff
became public.
“India is committed to the objective of maintenance of
peace and tranquillity in the border areas with China and our armed forces
scrupulously follow the consensus reached by our leaders and the guidance
provided. At the same time, we remain firm in our resolve to ensuring India’s
sovereignty and national security,” he said.
The Indian troops, he added,
have a “very responsible approach towards border management and strictly follow
the procedures laid out in various bilateral agreements and protocols with
China to resolve any issue that may arise in the border areas”.
These include five agreements signed by India and China
in the past two decades – the 1993 Agreement on Maintenance of Peace and
Tranquillity along the LAC in the India-China border areas, the 1996 Agreement
on Confidence Building Measures in the Military Field along the LAC, the 2005
Protocol on Modalities for the implementation of the Confidence Building
Measures in the Military Field, the 2012 Agreement on establishment of a
working mechanism for consultation and coordination on India-China Border
Affairs, and the 2013 Border Defence Cooperation Agreement.
Srivastava did not give a direct response to questions on
Chinese troops establishing a presence on the Indian side of the LAC and the
level at which diplomatic engagements were underway, and only said: “Our
engagement at the diplomatic level also continues between both sides, both in
Delhi as well as in Beijing.”
People familiar with developments said on condition of
anonymity the envoys of both countries were playing a key role in these
engagements.
China’s ambassador to India, Sun Weidong, had on
Wednesday called for putting ties back on an even keel. Without referring to
the standoff, he told a webinar the two sides “pose no threat to each other”
and should “never let the differences shadow the overall…bilateral
cooperation”. He also said they should seek “understanding through
communication”.