Sikkim standoff | No bilateral meeting took place between PM Modi, Jinping: China

Refusing interaction between Prime Minister Narendra Modi and President Xi Jinping on the side-lines of the G-20 summit at Hamburg last week, China on Monday said that no “bilateral meeting' took place between the two leaders.

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Sikkim standoff | No bilateral meeting took place between PM Modi, Jinping: China

Sikkim standoff | No bilateral meeting took place between PM Modi, Jinping: China (Source: ANI)

Refusing interaction between Prime Minister Narendra Modi and President Xi Jinping on the side-lines of the G-20 summit at Hamburg last week, China on Monday said that no “bilateral meeting” took place between the two leaders.

India also didn’t describe the interaction and said that a range of issues were discussed by the two leaders. The interaction between PM Modi and Jinping lasted for five minutes, India added. 

Facing several questions related to the meet, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman, Geng Shuang repeatedly said that no bilateral meeting took place.

“According to my information, the two leaders did not hold any bilateral meetings,” Shuang said.

“On the side-lines of the G20, President Xi also presided over the informal BRICS leaders meeting.  Prime Minister Modi and other leaders of the BRICS countries also attended that event”, he added.

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When asked about the meeting again, he said: “So my answer is that the two heads of state of India and China did not hold any meetings on the side-lines of the G20 summit in Hamburg.”

China’s insistence on the set-piece wording, and its refusal to waver from it, apparently was aimed at reiterating its view made clear before the Hamburg meeting: that the “atmosphere was not right” for a meeting between the two leaders due to the standoff between the two militaries at Doklam area in Sikkim sector, where Indian troops stopped road construction by Chinese soldiers.

China has been repeatedly calling for immediate withdrawal of the Indian troops from the area. He was also asked about a photograph tweeted by the India’s Ministry of External Affairs showing the two leaders in conversation with interpreters, Geng stuck to his stand.

“As I said many times, the two state leaders of India and China did not hold any bilateral meeting ... But President Xi chaired the informal BRICS meeting during which Prime Minister Modi was also present,” he said.

“We demand the Indian side to withdraw their border personnel on to the Indian side of the boundary. This is the precondition for the any meaningful dialogue,” Geng on the boundary standoff issue.

With PTI inputs.

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