India seeks ‘permanent solution’ to border dispute with China

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India's Defence Minister Rajnath Singh attends the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) Defence Ministers' Meeting in Qingdao, Shandong province, China June 26, 2025. REUTERS/Florence Lo

Defence Minister Rajnath Singh said India and China should solve border issues through a structured road map.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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Indian Defence Minister Rajnath Singh has told his Chinese counterpart that the two countries should seek a “permanent solution” to their decades-old border dispute.

He met China’s Mr Dong Jun on the sidelines of a meeting of defence ministers of the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) in Qingdao on June 26 and stressed solving issues through a structured road map, India’s Defence Ministry said in a statement on June 27.

“Singh also stressed on border management and to have a permanent solution of border demarcation by rejuvenating the established mechanism on the issue,” the statement said, referring to the border talks process between the Asian giants.

New Delhi’s stress on a permanent solution is considered significant as India has in the past generally used phrases such as seeking an early resolution to the dispute.

Beijing says the border dispute should not affect the larger relationship and differences should be managed properly until a mutually acceptable solution is found through dialogue.

There was no Chinese Defence Ministry statement yet on the meeting, and its Foreign Ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment on India’s statement.

The world’s two most populous nations – both nuclear powers – share a 3,800km, largely undemarcated and disputed border in the Himalayas, and have gone to war over it.

Although the frontier has been mostly peaceful in recent decades, a clash in 2020 resulted in the

deaths of 20 Indian and four Chinese soldiers.

That led to a four-year military stand-off, with both armies deploying tens of thousands of troops in the mountains until they reached a pact in October to step back.

During his meeting with Mr Dong, Mr Singh called for bridging the trust deficit created after the 2020 stand-off, New Delhi said.

They agreed to continue consultations to achieve progress on “disengagement, de-escalation, border management and eventual de-limitation”, the Defence Ministry statement added.

Beijing and New Delhi have continued to mend ties, and said in June they have agreed to expedite the resumption of direct air services, which were suspended after the 2020 clash, and step up communication.

SCO is a 10-nation Eurasian security and political grouping whose members include China, Russia, India, Pakistan and Iran. The defence ministers’ meeting was held as a precursor to the annual summit of its leaders set for autumn.

The SCO defence ministers were unable to adopt a joint statement at the end of their meeting due to a lack of consensus on referring to “terrorism”, India said on June 26.  REUTERS

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