Skip to content
Search

Latest Stories

India, China agree to resolve border dispute "peacefully" - statement

India and China have agreed to resolve a dispute over their shared border in the Ladakh region through diplomatic channels, the Indian foreign affairs ministry said in a statement.

The statement came a day before top generals of the two countries are due to meet near the site of their border standoff to try and find a way to de-escalate the situation.


Indian officials said both sides would first focus on getting both the Indian army and the People’s Liberation Army to pull back additional troops and equipment deployed in the area.

Soldiers from both sides have been camped out in the Galwan Valley in the high-altitude Ladakh region, accusing each other of trespassing over the disputed border, the trigger of a brief but bloody war in 1962.

Senior officials of the two countries held a video conference and agreed that "the two sides should handle their differences through peaceful discussion" and should not allow them to become disputes, the foreign affairs ministry statement said.

In Beijing, Geng Shuang, a spokesman of China's foreign affairs ministry, told reporters that the overall situation in the China-India border areas was currently "stable and controllable."

While maintaining close communication through diplomatic and military channels, both sides are working to "properly resolve relevant issues," the spokesman said, according to the statement posted on China's foreign affairs ministry website.

Both sides recalled the consensus reached by their two leaders that peaceful, stable and balanced relations between India and China would be positive for stability in the current global situation, the Indian statement said.

More For You

New MI6 chief warns of acute Russian threat, urges tech-driven intelligence

Technology will be a special area of focus for the new spy chief.

iStock

New MI6 chief warns of acute Russian threat, urges tech-driven intelligence

Highlights

  • MI6's first female chief warns of aggressive Russian hybrid warfare including cyber attacks and drone incidents.
  • Defence chief Richard Knighton calls for 'whole of society approach' to build national resilience against growing threats.
  • New spy chief emphasises technology mastery, urging intelligence officers to be 'as comfortable with computer code as with human sources'.

The new chief of MI6, Blaise Metreweli, will warn of "the acute threat posed by Russia" when she makes her first public speech later today, highlighting hybrid warfare tactics including cyber attacks and drone incidents near critical infrastructure.

Metreweli will describe this as "an acute threat posed by an aggressive, expansionist and revisionist Russia" and warn that "the front line is everywhere".

Keep ReadingShow less