BEIJING: National Security Advisor Ajit Doval will visit China next week to hold informal talks with his Chinese counterpart to discuss the vexed border dispute and other strategic issues, it was announced here today.
Doval, who is also the Special Representative for Sino-India boundary talks, will hold informal dialogue with his Chinese counterpart and state councillor Yang Jiechi on January 5 during which both officials would review the progress made on the border issue, Chinese officials said.
During his visit here, Doval would also call on Chinese Premier Li Keqiang on January 6.
India and China have so far held 18 round of talks to resolve the dispute along the 3488 km-long border.
Besides the annual dialogue on the border, the Special Representatives also meet informally to review the progress and discuss a host of strategic issues concerning bilateral relations including issues related to the neighbourhood.
The developments come as China seeks to deepen its engagement with countries in South Asia, which in turn has raised concerns in India.
For its part, China says the border dispute is concerned only to the Eastern sector specially Arunachal Pradesh which it claims as part of southern Tibet, while India asserts that the dispute includes the Western sector, specially the area occupied by China in the 1962 war.
Since he took over as NSA, Doval has visited Beijing twice and taken part in the 18th round of border talks held in New Delhi this year.
He visited China in September 2014 for talks ahead of Chinese President Xi Jinping’s visit to India. Later, the NSA was part of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s delegation which visited China earlier this year.
Besides the complex border talks, both sides also focussed their dialogue this year more on frequent “incursions” by the Chinese troops specially in the Ladakh sector, which caused tensions at the borders.
Two of such incursions happened during the visit of Li to India in 2013 and Xi in 2014. On both the occasions, the prolonged standoffs were resolved with hectic parlays at high levels.
China, for its part, maintains that the problem arises due to different perceptions of the border.
While the two sides held the Working Mechanism for Consultation and Coordination here this year which focussed on the issue of incursions, the issue also figured in the talks during the visits of Vice Chairman of China’s Central Military Commission General Fan Changlong’s visit to India as well as the recent China visit of India’s Northern Commander Lt General D S Hooda.
Both sides opened more border points to improve contacts between the troops along the Line Of Actual Control (LAC).