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Discussions with Chinese leaders will maintain 'positive trajectory' in bilateral ties :EAM
Discussions with Chinese leaders will maintain 'positive trajectory' in bilateral ties :EAM

United News of India

time2 days ago

  • Politics
  • United News of India

Discussions with Chinese leaders will maintain 'positive trajectory' in bilateral ties :EAM

Beijing/New Delhi, July 14 (UNI) External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar met Chinese Vice President Han Zheng in Beijing today and expressed confidence that his discussions with Chinese leaders would maintain the ''positive trajectory'' in relations between New Delhi and Beijing. In his opening remarks during his meeting with Vice President Han Zheng, Dr Jaishankar said India-China relations had been steadily improving since Prime Minister Narendra Modi met Chinese President Xi Jinping in Kazan last October. 'I am confident that my discussions in this visit will maintain that positive trajectory,'' he said and added that continued normalization of Bilateral India-China ties can produce mutually beneficial outcomes. He said that as neighbouring countries and major economies, an open exchange of views and perspectives between India and China is very important because of the ''very complex international situation.'' He said he looked forward to such discussions during this visit. Pointing out that both countries have marked the 75th anniversary of the establishment of bilateral diplomatic relations, Dr Jaishankar said the resumption of the Kailash Mansarovar Yatra is widely appreciated in India. The Kailash-Mansarovar yatra resumed in 2025 after a five-year hiatus triggered by the Covid-19 pandemic and border tensions between the two countries. The External Affairs Minister is visiting China to attend the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) Foreign Ministers' meeting tomorrow. This is his first visit to China after ties between the two countries took a hit following the military standoff along the Line of Actual Control (LAC) in eastern Ladakh in 2020. He extended support to a successful Chinese presidency at the SCO The SCO Foreign Ministers' meeting at Tianjin will be attended by Foreign Ministers of other SCO member countries and heads of SCO's permanent bodies. They will exchange views on SCO cooperation in various fields and major international and regional issues. In addition to attending the meeting. Dr Jaishankar is expected to hold talks with his Chinese counterpart Wang Yi. Sources said the two leaders are expected to discuss a range of issues, including rare earth supplies to India, the Dalai Lama succession, the recent India-Pakistan tensions and the resumption of direct flights between the two countries. National Security Adviser Ajit Doval also visited China last month to attend the 20th Meeting of the SCO Security Council Secretaries. Doval also held talks with Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi and underlined the urgency of addressing terrorism in all its forms. He emphasized the need to counter terrorism in all its forms and manifestations to maintain overall peace and stability in the region. Doval had called on Chinese Vice-President Han Zheng along with other Heads of Delegation attending the meeting. UNI RB RKM

Jaishankar meets Chinese VP, urges ‘continued normalisation' of ties
Jaishankar meets Chinese VP, urges ‘continued normalisation' of ties

United News of India

time2 days ago

  • Politics
  • United News of India

Jaishankar meets Chinese VP, urges ‘continued normalisation' of ties

Beijing/ New Delhi, July 14 (UNI) External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar met Chinese Vice President Han Zheng in Beijing today and called for 'continued normalisation' of ties between India and China. In his opening remarks during the meeting, Jaishankar said, "India supports a successful Chinese presidency at the SCO. Our bilateral relationship, as you have pointed, has been steadily improving since the meeting between Prime Minister Modi and President Xi Jinping in Kazan last October. I am confident that my discussions in this visit will maintain that positive trajectory." Jaishankar said the resumption of the Kailash Mansarovar Yatra is 'widely appreciated in India'. After a five-year hiatus triggered by the Covid-19 pandemic and extended due to tensions between India and China, the Kailash-Mansarovar yatra resumed in 2025. "The international situation, as we meet today, is very complex. As neighboring nations and major economies, an open exchange of views and perspectives between India and China are very important," he added. Jaishankar is in China to participate in the SCO Council of Foreign Ministers' Meeting (CFM) being held in Tianjin. The EAM will also hold bilateral meetings on the sidelines of the CFM. This is Jaishankar's first visit since the 2020 military standoff along the Line of Actual Control (LAC) in eastern Ladakh. National Security Adviser Ajit Doval also visited China last month to attend the 20th Meeting of the SCO Security Council Secretaries. Doval also held talks with Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi and underlined the urgency of addressing terrorism in all its forms. He emphasized the need to counter terrorism in all its forms and manifestations to maintain overall peace and stability in the region. During his visit, NSA Ajit Doval had called on Chinese Vice-President Han Zheng along with other Heads of Delegation attending the meeting. UNI AAB PRS

Kailash-Mansarovar yatra resumes after five years: history of a storied pilgrimage
Kailash-Mansarovar yatra resumes after five years: history of a storied pilgrimage

Indian Express

time4 days ago

  • Indian Express

Kailash-Mansarovar yatra resumes after five years: history of a storied pilgrimage

After a five-year hiatus triggered by the Covid-19 pandemic and extended due to tensions between India and China, the Kailash-Mansarovar yatra has resumed in 2025. This year, the Ministry of External Affairs chose 750 pilgrims who would be making the storied pilgrimage: five batches of 50 yatris will cross into Tibet through the Lipulekh pass in Uttarakhand, and 10 batches of 50 pilgrims will make the longer but relatively easier journey through the Nathu La pass in Sikkim. The first batches of pilgrims on both routes are currently on their way. With an elevation of 6,638 metres, Mount Kailash (Gang Rinpoche in Tibetan) is located in the Ngari Prefecture of the Tibet Autonomous Region, near the tri-junction of India, Tibet and Nepal. To its south on the Tibetan plateau are two lakes: the freshwater Manasarovar (Mapam Yumtso) and saltwater Rakshastal (Lhanag Tso). Both lakes and the towering mountain in their background are significant in Hindu, Buddhist, Jain, and Tibetan Bon traditions. 'For Hindus, [Kailash] is the home of the Hindu god Shiva… for Jains it is where their first leader was enlightened; for Buddhists, the navel of the universe; and for adherents of Bon, the abode of the sky goddess Sipaimen,' Alice Albinia wrote in her award-winning book Empires of the Indus: The Story of a River (2008). Four major rivers — the Yarlung Tsangpo (which later becomes the Brahmaputra), the Indus, the Sutlej, and the Karnali (later known as Ghaghra, a major tributary of the Ganga) — trace their to origins 'the watershed of this iconic mass of rock,' Albinia wrote. Despite its age-old sacredness, however, the Kailash-Mansarovar complex was not a popular pilgrimage site till 'as recently as the early 1900s…,' wrote Tibetologist Alex McKay in his book Kailas Histories: Renunciate Traditions and the Construction of Himalayan Sacred Geography (2015). 'The actual mountain was visited only by the occasional renunciate and not by ordinary Indian pilgrims. Indeed early Hindu and Buddhist texts clearly stated that Kailas was a heavenly place that could only be visited by advanced spiritual practitioners,' he wrote. This changed after 1904, when Tibet officially opened up to British subjects (including Indians), and courtesy the efforts of a certain Charles Sherring, then the district collector of Almora. Sherring in 1905 undertook an inspection of the Kailash-Mansarovar complex, and in his report recommended improving the pilgrimage route. In 1906, he would go on to publish a book, Western Tibet and the British Borderlands, about the sacred mountain which had a stunning photograph of Kailash on its cover. According to McKay, this book was an attempt to mainstream the beliefs of a small sect of Shaivite renunciates among the larger Hindu population, which Sherring hoped would drive pilgrim traffic and bring revenue and employment opportunities to his district. This is also why Sherring recommended the Lipulekh route, which passes through Almora, as the easiest path from the plains to the Kailash. Over the years, the Kailash-Mansarovar pilgrimage grew in popularity: in 1930, some 730 Indian pilgrims had reportedly made the journey to the holy mountain. The numbers would remain in the hundreds till the Chinese annexation of Tibet in 1950, following which Kailash was first closed to Europeans in 1951, and then to Indians in 1959. The pilgrimage opened up once again in 1981, in no small part due to the efforts of Subramanian Swamy, then an MP from the Janata Party. 'In April 1981, Swamy discussed the issue with Deng Xiaoping, and arrangements were finalised during the visit to India by the Chinese Foreign Minister in July of that year. Two months later, the first batch of a total of 60 Indian pilgrims set off for Kailas via Almora and the Lipulekh pass; Subramanian Swamy was among them,' McKay wrote. Pilgrims typically travel to and circumambulate Mansarovar, a 90-km walk that takes between three to five days to complete. Some then circumambulate Mount Kailash, a much more arduous 52-km trek that takes around three days to complete. C M Bhandari in his book A Journey to Heaven, Kailas-Mansarovar (1998) described his pilgrimage in 1997. The Tseti camp, on the western shore of Mansarovar, was the starting point for the circumambulation of the lake, after which pilgrims travelled to Huore, some 30 km to the north. Then they reached the Seralung monastery to the south of Huore, before travelling to Trugo Gompa, on the southern shore of the lake, and returning to Tseti. The Kailash trek began on the southern side of the mountain, at Tarchen. Pilgrims typically travel clockwise around the mountain, always keeping Kailash to their right. The trek passes through Dirapuk, Dolma La, Zutul Puk, and finally culminates in Tarchen. According to Bhandari, pilgrims must acclimatise to the high altitude before reaching Tibet. 'The arrangement via the Indian route allows almost 10 days of gradual climb from about 3,000 feet at Dharchula to 14,000 feet at Navidhang. This helps the body to get used to trekking in mountains at high altitudes,' he wrote. This year, yatris will stay at Dharchula for one night, then acclimatise at the village of Gunji for two nights, spend two more nights at Navidhang, before journeying through Lipulekh. In Tibet, pilgrims will be spending around a week before returning to Lipulekh. Due to the construction of motorable roads, the amount of trekking on the Lipulekh route has reduced considerably, down from 27 km in 2019 to only one km this year on the Indian side, Pooja Garbyal, additional secretary of tourism at Uttarakhand, told The Indian Express. On the Nathu La pass route, which first opened in 2015, the journey is even easier: pilgrims travel the entire 1,500 km from Nathu La to Mansarovar by car or bus. Aiswarya Raj is a correspondent with The Indian Express who covers South Haryana. An alumna of Asian College of Journalism and the University of Kerala, she started her career at The Indian Express as a sub-editor in the Delhi city team. In her current position, she reports from Gurgaon and covers the neighbouring districts. She likes to tell stories of people and hopes to find moorings in narrative journalism. ... Read More

Mansarovar Yatra: 45 pilgrims enter Tibet through Lipulekh pass
Mansarovar Yatra: 45 pilgrims enter Tibet through Lipulekh pass

The Print

time6 days ago

  • The Print

Mansarovar Yatra: 45 pilgrims enter Tibet through Lipulekh pass

Pithoragarh, Jul 10 (PTI) The first batch of 45 Kailash-Mansarovar pilgrims passing through the Lipulekh pass here entered Tibet, situated at an altitude of 17,000 feet, on Thursday morning, said an official in the nodal agency for the pilgrimage. Dhan Singh Bisht, in charge of the Kumaon Mandal Vikas Nigam's Dharchula base camp, said the pilgrims reached Nabhidang, situated at an altitude of 4,104 feet above Gunji on Tuesday and stayed there through the next day to acclimatise themselves.

Mansarovar Yatra: First batch of 45 pilgrims enter Tibet via Lipulekh pass
Mansarovar Yatra: First batch of 45 pilgrims enter Tibet via Lipulekh pass

Business Standard

time6 days ago

  • Business Standard

Mansarovar Yatra: First batch of 45 pilgrims enter Tibet via Lipulekh pass

During their stay in Tibet, the pilgrims will halt at Taklakot, Darchen, Dera Phuk, Junghui Poo and Kugu and will visit and circumambulate Mount Kailash and the Manasarovar Lake Press Trust of India Pithoragarh The first batch of 45 Kailash-Mansarovar pilgrims passing through the Lipulekh pass here entered Tibet, situated at an altitude of 17,000 feet, on Thursday morning, said an official in the nodal agency for the pilgrimage. Dhan Singh Bisht, in charge of the Kumaon Mandal Vikas Nigam's Dharchula base camp, said the pilgrims reached Nabhidang, situated at an altitude of 4,104 feet above Gunji on Tuesday and stayed there through the next day to acclimatise themselves. During their stay in Tibet, the pilgrims will halt at Taklakot, Darchen, Dera Phuk, Junghui Poo and Kugu and will visit and circumambulate Mount Kailash and the Manasarovar Lake, believed to be the abode of Lord Shiva. This group will return to India via the Lipulekh Pass on July 18. Meanwhile, another group of 48 pilgrims left for Gunji from the Dharchula base camp. This group comprises 34 male and 14 female pilgrims, including former MP Meenakshi Lekhi. This year, about 250 pilgrims will go on Kailash Mansarovar Yatra in five groups through the Lipulekh Pass. (Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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