logo
Jaishankar to visit China next week in first visit since LAC standoff

Jaishankar to visit China next week in first visit since LAC standoff

External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar will travel to Tianjin, China, next week to attend the foreign ministers' meeting of the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO), nearly two weeks after Defence Minister Rajnath Singh visited the country for the SCO defence ministers' summit.
'The Meeting of the Council of the Ministers of Foreign Affairs of the SCO will be held in Tianjin on July 15,' a Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson said in an official statement on Saturday, news agency PTI reported.
Jaishankar will also pay a bilateral visit to China during the trip, though details of that visit were not specified.
The Chinese Foreign Ministry noted that foreign ministers of SCO member states and heads of the bloc's permanent bodies 'will exchange views on SCO cooperation in various fields and major international and regional issues.'
The SCO includes 10 members: China, Russia, India, Iran, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Pakistan, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan, and Belarus.
This will be Jaishankar's first visit to China since the 2020 military standoff along the Line of Actual Control (LAC) in eastern Ladakh, which severely strained bilateral ties.
Rajnath Singh was in Qingdao last month for the SCO defence ministers' meeting, where he met Chinese Defence Minister Gen Dong Jun on June 26.
During those talks, Singh proposed a 'structured roadmap' to de-escalate tensions and rejuvenate border demarcation mechanisms. He stressed the importance of 'taking action on the ground' to bridge the 'trust deficit' from the 2020 standoff and called for creating 'good neighbourly conditions' for mutual benefit.
As per a report by PTI, responding to Singh's remarks, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Mao Ning said: 'The boundary question is complicated, and it takes time to settle it.'
The two countries completed disengagement from Demchok and Depsang in October 2021, effectively ending the border face-off.
The decision to revive talks, including the SR mechanism, was taken during the Modi-Xi Jinping meeting in Kazan, Russia, on October 23, just days after the disengagement pact was sealed.
In recent months, both countries have taken several steps to improve ties, including the resumption of the Kailash Manasarovar Yatra after a nearly five-year gap.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

China's political situation unstable but interest in Buddhism growing: Dalai Lama
China's political situation unstable but interest in Buddhism growing: Dalai Lama

Hindustan Times

time2 hours ago

  • Hindustan Times

China's political situation unstable but interest in Buddhism growing: Dalai Lama

The exiled Tibetan spiritual leader, 14th Dalai Lama, after his arrival in Ladakh on Saturday said that the political situation in China is not stable but there is a growing interest in Buddhism. Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama. (AP) The 90-year-old spiritual leader, while speaking at Shewatsel Phodrang, said that he has also received invitations to visit China but he felt it would be difficult to teach Buddhism there. 'In China, the political situation is not stable, but interest in Buddhism is growing. I have received many messages inviting me to visit China, but I feel it would be difficult to teach about Buddhism in a country where there is no freedom—I feel it's more effective to teach about Buddhism in India,' he told the gathering on Saturday. The 14th Dalai Lama, who has been living in exile for over 66 years now, began his month-long spiritual visit to Ladakh on Saturday. He travels to Ladakh from his exile home in Dharamshala during the monsoon season, seeking the region's drier and more temperate climate. The Dalai Lama also alluded to the destruction the Chinese authorities have wrought upon the traditions of studying the great treatises in Tibet. He stressed the importance of scholars from the Himalayan region working to keep these traditions of study alive. The spiritual leader recalled how the chaos in Tibet in 1959 meant he could not stay and had to flee. Since then, he said, the Government of India has been immensely supportive and has extended tremendous assistance to Tibetans. He reiterated how great learning traditions that could not continue in Tibet have been re-established in centres of learning in India. He said, 'The precious traditions that we can learn and implement in daily life, have declined in Tibet. Those who fled to India have had the responsibility of preserving these traditions. In Tibet, many experienced harsh Chinese treatment, so here in the freedom of India we must do whatever we can to preserve these precious traditions.' Recalling the time when he was forced to flee into exile, the 14th Dalai Lama said, 'The night I left Norbulingka in 1959 I did a lot of investigation, including consulting the Nechung Oracle, and doing divinations. I decided to go. We crossed the river running through Lhasa and climbed the pass. From there I looked back at the city where the Chinese authorities had imposed such tight controls that citizens were under great pressure and stress. I felt sad that whereas in the past Lhasa had been a great place to study and learn from the great treatises, it was no more.' 'But it's useless to stay sad. Instead we have to do something. When I reached the Tibetan border with India, I decided I would have to put all my effort into building institutions that would preserve what we used to have. We have done quite well,' he said. The Tibetan spiritual leader became the 14th reincarnation of the Dalai Lama in 1940. In 1959, the Dalai Lama, then 23-year-old Tenzin Gyatso, fled to India with thousands of Tibetans following a failed uprising against Mao Zedong's Communist rule, which gained control of Tibet in 1950. He later arrived in Dharamshala in 1960.

Russia Backs Pakistan's Rusting Pride – And Sends A Message To India
Russia Backs Pakistan's Rusting Pride – And Sends A Message To India

India.com

time2 hours ago

  • India.com

Russia Backs Pakistan's Rusting Pride – And Sends A Message To India

Moscow/New Delhi: In a move that is bound to stir concern in New Delhi, Russia has formally signed a new industrial cooperation agreement with Pakistan – a revival attempt of the long-defunct Pakistan Steel Mills (PSM) in Karachi. Described as a protocol of cooperation, the pact was signed at the Pakistani Embassy in Moscow and promises to restart and expand steel production at a facility that was once the pride of Soviet-Pakistani engineering. This deal marks a new chapter in a forgotten story – one that began more than half a century ago. Back in 1971, it was the Soviet Union that helped lay the foundation of Pakistan's largest industrial complex. Today, after decades of neglect, a trail of mounting losses and shifting political winds, Russia is circling back to finish what it once started. 'This revival, with Russia's help, is more than a business deal. It reflects our shared industrial history and a future we want to build together,' said Pakistan Prime Minister's Special Assistant Haroon Akhtar Khan during his Moscow visit. According to Pakistan's national news agency APP, the signing ceremony also reaffirmed the 'long-standing industrial partnership' between the two nations. The objective is to bring the Karachi-based steel plant back to life and boost its output, possibly restoring thousands of lost jobs and reigniting a sector that has remained idle for far too long. Also In The Race, But Left Behind For months, China too was eyeing the same prize. When Imran Khan's Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) government decided to restart the revival efforts in 2018, it first engaged a Chinese firm for negotiations. However, the talks hit a dead end. The Chinese bid faded, but the Russians, perhaps driven by nostalgia and ownership of the project's origins, never stopped knocking. Russia insisted it was the only logical choice to resuscitate the steel plant it once designed. The Kremlin saw itself not as an outsider but as a returning builder – one who knew the bones of the structure better than anyone else. A Ruin Built From Decay And Delay Once a symbol of industrial ambition, the PSM began its steep descent in 2008. Losses piled up after a slew of politically motivated hirings, combined with the blowback of the global financial crisis. By the end of the 2008-09 fiscal year, the plant had already sunk into a deficit of nearly 17 billion Pakistani rupees. That number ballooned over the next five years, touching 118.7 billion. Even as successive governments, first under the Pakistan's People's Party and later the Pakistan Muslim League (Nawaz), watched the unit bleed. There was no coordinated effort to stop the rot. President Pervez Musharraf's regime had once seen the plant report profits of over 9.5 billion rupees in 2007-08. A decade later, by May 31, 2018, it had sunk to a terrifying 200 billion-rupee hole. The PTI came with promises of revival. What followed was a silent bidding war between Russia and China for control of the broken machine. This new agreement finally puts Moscow in the driver's seat. The Express Tribune reports that Pakistan now hopes this Russian-backed turnaround will not only rescue an industrial dinosaur but also breathe new life into a crucial sector of its crippled economy. Russia, too, appears eager to re-establish its economic footprint in South Asia, starting with steel, in a country once deeply aligned with the United States but now visibly drifting toward Moscow and Beijing.

Muhammadu Buhari, former Nigerian President, dies at 82 in London
Muhammadu Buhari, former Nigerian President, dies at 82 in London

Mint

time2 hours ago

  • Mint

Muhammadu Buhari, former Nigerian President, dies at 82 in London

Former Nigerian President, Muhammadu Buhari, has died at the age of 82 years in a London clinic, PTI quoted his press secretary as saying on Sunday. Prior to his death, he was receiving medical treatment in London. "President Buhari died today in London at about 4:30 p.m. (1530 GMT), following a prolonged illness," President Bola Tinubu's spokesperson said in a post on X. Buhari had previously led Nigeria twice as a military head of state and a democratic president. He was the first president to defeat a sitting president after he was elected in 2015. Born in December 1942 in Daura in Katsina state in the far north of Nigeria, Muhammadu Buhari was admitted to the Nigerian Military Training College soon after leaving school. He joined the Nigerian army shortly after independence. He undertook officer training in the UK from 1962-1963 and climbed up the ranks. He became a military commander by 1978, and by 1983, he became the country's military ruler after a coup, against elected President Shehu Shagari. Though he claimed he was not one of the plotters but was installed by those who held the real power and needed a figurehead, reported BBC. Muhammadu Buhari was never considered a natural politician, but a self-styled converted democrat. Burari achieved a historic victory in 2015 after three failed attempts and became the country's first opposition candidate to defeat an incumbent President. He was re-elected for another four-year term in 2019. Always popular among the poor of the north, however, Burari also had the advantage of a united opposition grouping behind him for his 2015 campaign. Burari united people to fight against the Islamist insurgency in the north. He had promised to tackle corruption and nepotism in government, and create employment opportunities for young Nigerians at that time.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store