Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Chinese President Xi Jinping held their first formal talks in five years, and the Asian giants, who were affected by a fatal military conflict in 2020, have begun to recover. It is shown.
The two leaders met bystanders at the BRICS summit in Kazan, Russia on Wednesday, and the Indian government and Chinese state media said New Delhi had signed a deal with Beijing to settle four-year troops They stand up to their contested Himalayan frontier, two days after they announced that they had concluded.
The relationship between the two most populous nations in the world – both nuclear forces – is tense as clashes between the military in the unpervasive frontiers of the western Himalayas in western Ladakh died in 2020. It’s there.
Neighbors have since grown military presence along the ice frontier, adding tens of thousands of troops and weapons over the past four years.
Modi and Xi both participated in multilateral events, but had not held formal bilateral meetings.
Their final summit consultation took place in October 2019 in the southern Indian town of Mamalapuram.
The two briefly spoke and exchanged courtesy about the bystanders of the G20 Summit held in Bali in November 2022.
They spoke again on the sidelines at the BRICS Summit held in Johannesburg in August 2023, but eventually released a different version of the conversation.
Xi skipped the G20 summit, hosted by New Delhi the following month.