Modi-Xi bilateral today, first in 5 years, after China confirms LAC agreement

Modi-Xi bilateral today, first in 5 years, after China confirms LAC agreement

Hours after China, without mentioning the agreement on patrolling along the Line of Actual Control, confirmed it had “reached a solution” and would “work with India” to “effectively implement” the plan, India announced Tuesday that Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Chinese President Xi Jinping would hold a bilateral meeting Wednesday on the sidelines of the BRICS Summit in Kazan, capital of Tatarstan in Russia.

This will be the first bilateral meeting between the two leaders in five years — they met for an informal summit in Mahabalipuram in October 2019, months before the Chinese incursions in eastern Ladakh that triggered a military standoff along the LAC. They did have pull-aside meetings in Bali (2022) and Johannesburg (2023), but the meeting Wednesday will be the first proper and structured bilateral meeting.

Foreign Secretary Vikram Misri, briefing the media in Kazan, said, “I can confirm that there will be a bilateral meeting between Prime Minister Modi and Chinese President Xi Jinping tomorrow on the sidelines of the BRICS Summit.”

On the patrolling arrangement, Misri said, “What it will entail is that in the pending areas under discussion, patrolling, and indeed grazing activities, wherever applicable, will revert to the situation as… in 2020… As far as the disengagement agreements reached previously are concerned, those agreements were not reopened in these discussions. The agreement that was reached yesterday, very early yesterday morning, was focused on issues that had remained outstanding in the last couple of years.”