External Affairs Minister Salman Khurshid will visit China on May 9 notwithstanding the ongoing standoff between Indian troops and Chinese forces which intruded deep inside Depsang Valley in Ladakh ten days ago.
Khurshid’s trip comes ahead of the visit by newly elected Chinese Premier Li Keqiang to India later next month. A lot of significance is being attached to Li’s visit, his first abroad after becoming Prime Minister last month.
“I am going on May 9,” Khurshid told reporters when asked about his proposed visit to China.
The Minister also expressed confidence that India and China will be able to resolve the situation arising after the incursion by Chinese forces in Indian territory.
Noting that there is a working mechanism between the two countries to deal with such issues, Khurshid said: “Let us allow that mechanism to find its solution and repeatedly it has found. And we have good reasons to believe that it should be able to do it again.”
Earlier during his speech at FICCI, Khurshid said: “disagreement” on any issue is not “betrayal’’.
“People ask me what is wrong with India that all its neighbours are not its friends, what is wrong with India? And I tell them, you have an idea of friendship which is different from mine. My idea of friendship is when you are frank, free with each other, you have expectations and you deliver.
“You agree and you disagree, but you have constant faith that a disagreement is not betrayal. A disagreement is like two intelligent people working out life plans and not necessarily kicking the heels saying one is right and one is wrong,” he said.
Earlier this week, India had asked China to revert back to the status quo position in Depsang Valley in Ladakh.
Khurshid also said that these things happen because there is variance of perception between the two countries as there is no demarcation of the Line of Actual Control.