At least 24 soldiers were killed when the two sides clashed in the
region in mid-2020, but the situation has been calmed through rounds
of diplomatic and military talks.
Violence erupted in the eastern sector of the undemarcated border
between the nuclear-armed Asia giants in December but did not result
in any deaths.
"The situation to my mind still remains very fragile because there
are places where our deployments are very close up and in military
assessment therefore quite dangerous," Jaishankar said at an India
Today conclave.
India-China relations cannot go back to normal, he said, until the
border row is resolved in line with the September 2020 in-principle
agreement he reached with his Chinese counterpart.
"The Chinese have to deliver on what was agreed to, and they have
struggled with that."
Although forces from both sides have disengaged from many areas,
discussions are proceeding over unresolved points, Jaishankar said.
"We have made it very clear to the Chinese that we cannot have a
breach of peace and tranquility, you can't violate agreement and
want the rest of the relationship to continue as though nothing
happened. That’s just not tenable."
Jaishankar said he discussed the situation with China's new foreign
minister, Qin Gang, on the sidelines of a meeting of the foreign
ministers of the G20 nations hosted by India this month.
Regarding India's presidency of G20 this year, Jaishankar expressed
hope that New Delhi can make the forum "more true to its global
mandate".
"The G20 should not be a debating club or an arena only of the
global north. The entirety of global concerns need to be captured.
We have already made that point very forcefully," Jaishankar said.
Two G20 ministerial meetings in India in the last three weeks have
been overshadowed by Russia's 13-month invasion of Ukraine.
(Reporting by Krishn Kaushik and Nidhi Verma; Editing by William
Mallard)
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