Foreign secretary Vikram Misri to visit China on Jan. 26
Top diplomats from China and India will meet next week in Beijing as the nuclear-armed neighbors try to repair ties marred by a border dispute nearly five years ago.
Foreign Secretary Vikram Misri will travel to Beijing on a two-day visit starting Sunday to discuss next steps in improving ties between the two nations. This comes after armies of India and China in October last year agreed to disengage from friction points at Line of Actual Control(LAC)in Eastern Ladakh.
At present, China maintains contact with Bangladesh's caretaker government and influential groups within the country, including radical organizations like Jamaat-e-Islami.
California Wildfire | Vantage with Palki Sharma | N18G US President-elect Donald Trump is set to take charge next week. And on his first day in the Oval Office, he plans to disrupt global trade by imposing heavy tariffs on China.
Foreign secretary Vikram Misri will undertake a two-day visit to Beijing starting Sunday to attend a meeting of the foreign secretary-vice minister mechanism between India and China,
Sri Lankan President Anura Kumara Dissanayake has held talks with Chinese leader Xi Jinping, one month after visiting India on his first overseas trip since winning election in September
China, the world's biggest coal consumer, extended its lead in imports over No. 2 buyer India last year to the widest since at least 2013, customs data shows, cementing its hold on global coal markets and helping to curb a slide in prices.
India's Foreign Secretary Vikram Misri will visit Beijing on Jan. 26-27 for talks to discuss the next steps in ties with China, which were frozen following a military clash on their border in 2020, the Indian foreign ministry said on Thursday.
Jakarta’s negotiations to acquire the BrahMos supersonic cruise missile from India have gained momentum ahead of president Prabowo Subianto’s visit as the Republic Day chief guest
India-China relations remain tense over an ongoing border dispute in the Himalayan region of Ladakh, despite a top-level meeting late last year aimed at military disengagement - Anadolu Ajansı
The competition for critical minerals has become a fulcrum of international economic diplomacy and for nations such as India is a wake-up call