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PM Modi informs Xi Jinping that the future of India-China relations depends on mutual trust, respect, and sensitivity.

PM Modi and Xi Jinping emphasize mutual trust for India-China relations in Kazan. At the BRICS Summit, important bilateral discussions center on border peace following the Galwan conflict.
In order for India-China relations to come around and continue to be sustainable, Prime Minister Narendra Modi told Chinese President Xi Jinping on Wednesday that they must be built on three mutuals: mutual trust, mutual respect, and mutual sensitivity.

“We applaud the agreement made on the problems that have emerged along the India-China border during the past four years. Our first goal should continue to be preserving border peace and stability. “The foundation of our relationship is mutual trust, mutual respect, and mutual sensitivity.

The Chinese president acknowledged that people in both countries, as well as the international community, are closely monitoring the meeting as Prime Minister Modi emphasized the importance of India-China relations for both the people of both countries and for world peace, stability, and advancement.

Both China and India are significant members of the Global South, significant growing nations, and ancient civilizations. Both of us are in a pivotal stage of our modernization initiatives. “Keeping the historical trajectory of our bilateral relations in the correct direction best serves the fundamental interests of our two countries and two peoples for both sides,” said Xi Jinping.

“It’s critical that we both communicate and work together more, manage our differences and conflicts appropriately, and support one another’s development goals. It’s also critical that both sides fulfill their international obligations, lead by example in bolstering the power and solidarity of developing nations, and support multipolarization and democracy in international affairs,” he continued.

The agreement between Beijing and New Delhi on Monday regarding patrolling along the nearly 3500-km Line of Actual Control (LAC) to end the four-year border confrontation was the first step toward a breakthrough in bilateral talks following the violent Galwan Valley face-off between the two nations’ soldiers at the Line of Actual Control (LAC) in June 2020.

In order to supervise the maintenance of peace and tranquility along the border and to investigate a just, rational, and amicable resolution to the boundary dispute, the two presidents decided that the Special Representatives on the India-China boundary issue would convene as soon as possible. Following the two leaders’ meeting, the Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) released a statement saying, “The relevant dialogue mechanisms at the level of Foreign Ministers and other officials will also be utilized to stabilize and rebuild bilateral relations.”