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Amid LAC standoff, 8th Corps Commander-level talks between India, China likely soon
The eighth round of Corps Commander-level talks between India and China is likely to take place this week with a focus on carrying forward their discussions on the disengagement process in eastern Ladakh.
Highlights
- The eighth round of Corps Commander-level talks between India and China is likely to take place this week.
- The talks will focus on carrying forward their discussions on the disengagement process in eastern Ladakh.
- India has all along maintained that China has to carry forward the process of disengagement and de-escalation along the friction points.
New Delhi: The eighth round of Corps Commander-level talks between India and China is likely to take place this week with a focus on carrying forward their discussions on the disengagement process in eastern Ladakh as the region enters the harsh winter season, government sources said.
"The eighth round of military talks are likely to take place this week. The date is yet to be finalised," said a source.
Both sides had met on for the seventh round of talks on October 12, though there was no breakthrough on the disengagement of troops from the friction points at eastern Ladakh. But both have maintained that the talks were "positive and constructive".
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India has all along maintained that the onus is on China to carry forward the process of disengagement and de-escalation at the friction points.
Meanwhile, External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar on Friday stated that the violent clashes on the India-China border in June has left a very deep public and major political impact and the relationship between the two nations has been "profoundly disturbed".
"From the conceptual level down to the behavioural level, there was an entire sort of framework out there. Now, what we saw this year was a departure from this entire series of agreements. The massing of a large number of Chinese forces on the border was clearly contrary to all of this. And when you had friction point which was a large number of troops at different points very close to each other, then something tragic like what happened on 15th of June happened," the minister said.
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In the last three months, the Indian Army has rushed tanks, heavy weaponry, ammunition, fuel, food and essential winter supplies to various treacherous and high-altitude areas of the region to maintain combat readiness through the harsh winter.
At least three attempts have been made by the Chinese soldiers to "intimidate" Indian troops along the northern and southern bank of Pangong lake area between August 29 and September 8. The situation in eastern Ladakh deteriorated further when shots were fired in the air for the first time at the LAC in 45 years.
Tensions had escalated manifold between India and China after the Galwan Valley clashes in eastern Ladakh on June 15 in which 20 Indian Army personnel were killed. The Chinese People's Liberation Army also suffered an unspecified number of casualties.