Diplomats on the job to end standoff with China, Jaishankar tells parliamentary panel

Foreign Secretary tells MPs that talks are on at various levels, and television channels are showing vastly exaggerated versions of India-China conflict

July 18, 2017 08:50 pm | Updated December 03, 2021 12:41 pm IST - New Delhi

A file photo of India's Foreign Secretary S. Jaishankar.

A file photo of India's Foreign Secretary S. Jaishankar.

Congress vice-president Rahul Gandhi on Tuesday posed questions to Foreign Secretary S. Jaishankar on a range of issues. He wanted to know why after years of hard work to build a relationship of mutual respect with China through set mechanisms, things had collapsed. Was that a failure of Indian foreign policy, he asked.

Mr. Gandhi put forward this question while making a lengthy intervention at a meeting of the Parliamentary Standing Committee on External Affairs here.

He wanted to know why traditional friends like Turkey and Iraq were turning against India on the Kashmir issue: he referred to the visit of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan earlier this year in May when he made the provocative suggestion of a “multilateral dialogue” on Kashmir, and offered to mediate between India and Pakistan. Mr. Gandhi also asked what had led China’s efforts to show Bhutan that it could serve that country’s interests better than India, with which it has had a long-standing relationship, sources said.

Exaggerated versions

Mr. Jaishankar, who was slated to brief the committee members on India-China ties in the wake of the military standoff in Doklam, tried to reassure the MPs that what Indian TV channels were showing was vastly exaggerated and that Indian diplomats were on the job, taking forward what was done by governments in the past, the sources said.

He stressed that talks were on at the commander level, flag level and Special Representative level to calm the situation. He explained, the sources said, that China was asserting its own position, and that India was operating in a fast changing world. He assured the MPs that everything would be eventually resolved.

Trinamool Congress MP Sugata Bose asked whether there was a China connection in the Darjeeling agitation. To this, CPI(M) MP Mohammad Salim said that since the Chief Ministers of West Bengal and Jammu and Kashmir had accused China of fomenting trouble in their respective States, had the Central government asked the intelligence agencies to check on what was happening to prevent the situation from deteriorating further.

The Foreign Secretary said he could not take it up at his level. Mr. Bose riposted: “Take it to the appropriate level.”

 

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