Willing to play 'positive and constructive role' in easing India-Pakistan relations: China

Press Trust of India  |  Beijing 

said today it is willing to play a "positive and constructive role" in easing relations between and as it welcomed the "positive" remarks of and his new Pakistani counterpart on improving bilateral ties.

said the improvement and development of relations between and are important to regional peace, stability and prosperity.

"We have noted relevant reports and we welcome the positive remarks made by the Indian and Pakistani leaders on improving bilateral relations," Lu said while replying to a question on the statements made by the two leaders soon after Khan assumed office as Pakistan's 22nd on August 18.

"Both and are important countries in As a common neighbour to Pakistan and India, firmly supports the two sides to enhance dialogue increase mutual trust, properly handle and solve their differences," Lu said, according to the official transcript of the briefing issued by the

hopes the two countries can jointly stay committed to regional peace and development, he said.

"China is willing to play a constructive role in this aspect," he said.

Asked what he meant by China playing a constructive role, the said, "We are very pleased to see that the leaders of Pakistan and India have recently made positive remarks on improving bilateral relations."

"It is of course a good thing for both sides to continuously improve relations and jointly work together for regional peace and stability. As long as there is any possibility, China is of course willing to play a positive and constructive role," he said.

Asked whether he is suggesting that China wants to mediate between India and Pakistan, Lu said "I can't give you a prejudgement now, telling you which aspect, what area, and what time China will do what things."

"But it is clear that constructive role is any role that is conducive to advancing, consolidating and sustaining the positive momentum," he elaborated.

Ties between India and Pakistan nosedived following a spate of terror attacks on Indian military bases by Pakistan-based terror groups since January 2016. India has made it clear that it will not hold dialogue with Pakistan as terrorism and talks cannot go hand-in-hand.

India has also been maintaining that it is ready to talk to Pakistan only bilaterally without the intervention of any other nation, including China.

On August 20, Modi had sent a letter to Khan, conveying that India was looking for constructive and meaningful engagement with Pakistan.

Khan in a tweet yesterday expressed Pakistan's willingness to re-start the stalled India-Pakistan peace process and said the two countries must engage in dialogue to resolve their differences, including on the issue, and start trade.

In June, the Chinese to India, Luo Zhaohui, was quoted in the media as saying that Sino-Indian ties cannot take the strain of "another" Doklam standoff. According to the reports, he had mooted a "trilateral" China-India-Pakistan dialogue on the sidelines of a (SCO) conference to resolve regional issues and maintain peace.

Ministry of at that time had said that India has not received any such suggestion from the

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Wed, August 22 2018. 18:00 IST