New York: India and China have resolved the two-week stand-off at the border in Ladakh and soldiers from both sides will withdraw by Tuesday, Foreign Minister Sushma Swaraj said on Thursday, describing it as a "big accomplishment."
"I am happy to tell you that both nations have sat down and resolved the issue. Timelines have been decided," Ms Swaraj told reporters in New York after a meeting with foreign ministers of Brazil and South Africa on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly session.
"The bad phase will end and by September 30th, the withdrawal of troops will be completed. I talked about this with the Chinese Foreign Minister. I believe this is a big accomplishment," she added.
The two armies were locked in a stare-down at Chumur in Ladakh since September 11, which clouded Chinese President Xi Jinping's three-day India visit last week.
For days, over 1,000 soldiers of the Chinese PLA and 1,500 Indian Army personnel were engaged in an eyeball-to-eyeball confrontation in the area. Prime Minister Narendra Modi raised it twice with the Chinese president but nothing changed at the time.
Tension erupted when some Chinese workers crossed over with equipment to build a road up five km deep inside Indian territory.
A marathon flag meeting between the two armies on Thursday facilitated an end to the crisis.
China is believed to have agreed not construct the disputed road and India will not construct observations points and bunkers in the disputed area.
"I am happy to tell you that both nations have sat down and resolved the issue. Timelines have been decided," Ms Swaraj told reporters in New York after a meeting with foreign ministers of Brazil and South Africa on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly session.
"The bad phase will end and by September 30th, the withdrawal of troops will be completed. I talked about this with the Chinese Foreign Minister. I believe this is a big accomplishment," she added.
For days, over 1,000 soldiers of the Chinese PLA and 1,500 Indian Army personnel were engaged in an eyeball-to-eyeball confrontation in the area. Prime Minister Narendra Modi raised it twice with the Chinese president but nothing changed at the time.
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A marathon flag meeting between the two armies on Thursday facilitated an end to the crisis.
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