Ahead of Chinese FM visit, Cong flags Beijing’s support to Pak in Op Sindoor
Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi will meet Prime Minister Modi during his two-day visit to India beginning Monday, according to the Ministry of External Affairs (MEA).
PTI
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Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi & Prime Minister Modi (PTI)
New Delhi, 18 August
Ahead of the Chinese foreign minister's arrival in New Delhi on Monday,
Congress leader Jairam Ramesh targeted the government and pointed out that the
visit comes just three months after Beijing supplied weapon systems and live
intelligence updates to Pakistan during Operation Sindoor.
He said India was paying the price for Prime Minister Narendra Modi's
"clean chit" to China on the Galwan issue and asserted that it was an
insult to the martyrdom of 20 Indian soldiers who were killed in a clash with
Chinese forces in the Galwan valley in June 2020.
"Only three months ago, China gave total military support to
Pakistan during Operation Sindoor, providing it with weapon systems such as the
J-10C fighter and PL-15 air-to-air missile and a variety of missiles and
drones,” Congress general secretary, communications, Ramesh said on X.
"China provided Pakistan live intelligence against India according
to Deputy Chief of Army Staff Lt Gen Rahul R Singh, who went so far as to state
on 4 July, 2025, that China was one of the "adversaries" India was
fighting during Operation Sindoor," he added.
Operation Sindoor, which was launched on 7 May to avenge the horrific 22 April Pahalgam attack that saw terrorists gunning down 26 persons, resulted
in massive damage to terror infrastructure in Pakistan-Occupied Kashmir and Pakistan. Pakistan's counter-attack caused no impact and the two nations
decided to cease hostilities on 10 May.
Ramesh said China has also begun constructing the 60 GW Medog Dam on the
Yarlung Tsangpo river, which has "very serious implications" for
India.
"Despite the clear desire by the Indian Army for a return to the
status quo of April 2020, the government agreed to a disengagement with China
in October 2024 under which Indian patrols require Chinese concurrence to reach
their patrolling points in Depsang, Demchok, and Chumar," he said.
India has agreed to "buffer zones" in Galwan, Hot Spring, and
Pangong Tso that lie within the Indian claim line, he further claimed.
"This is far from the status quo as it prevailed before the Chinese
aggression. India is paying the price for Prime Minister Modi's (infamous)
clean chit to China given publicly on 19 June, 2020, when he had declared 'Na
koi hamari seema mein ghus aaya hai, na hi koi ghusa hua hai'," Ramesh
alleged.
"This had made a complete mockery of and was an insult to the
martyrdom of 20 Indian soldiers earlier in Galwan in June 2020," he claimed.
Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi will meet Prime Minister Modi during his two-day visit to India beginning Monday, according to the Ministry of
External Affairs (MEA).
The meeting, scheduled to be held on Tuesday, assumes significance as it
is taking place days before Modi's planned trip to China to attend the annual
summit of the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO).
Before calling on the prime minister, Wang will hold separate talks with
External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar and National Security Advisor Ajit Doval
that could see both sides deliberate on a range of key issues, including the
border situation, trade, and resumption of flight services.
The Chinese foreign minister's visit is largely seen as part of ongoing
efforts by the two neighbours to rebuild their relationship after it came under
severe strain following the deadly Galwan Valley clashes.
The two sides are expected to discuss new confidence-building measures
for durable peace and tranquillity along their contested border during Wang's
visit, people familiar with the matter said on Sunday.
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