March 25, 2022
1 min read

India not invited to China-led Afghan meet

Answering a question of whether Indo-Pacific featured in the talks, Jaishankar answered that Indo-Pacific did not come up during the talks….reports Asian Lite News

External Affairs Minister (EAM) S Jaishankar on Friday said that China has not invited India to the Afghanistan meeting that is set to take place later in March.

China had earlier announced the third foreign ministers’ meeting among the neighbouring countries of Afghanistan. The Taliban have confirmed participation in the meeting scheduled to be held later this month.

“On the Afghanistan meeting, which the Chinese are convening, I believe… No, they have not invited us,” Jaishankar said during a press conference after holding the delegation-level talks with Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi.

Answering a question on Wang Yi’s recent remark at the OIC meeting, Jaishankar said the two ministers discussed that issue and he conveyed India’s hope that China would follow an independent policy in respect to New Delhi.

“I conveyed that we hope that China would follow an independent policy in respect to India and not allow its policies to be influenced by other countries and other relationships,” said Jaishankar.

On the issue of terrorism emanating from Pakistan, Jaishankar said, “It did come up, in terms of my sharing with him India’s view of concerns, what we have in respect of Pakistan and of course what were the positions taken during OIC meet.”

Answering a question of whether Indo-Pacific featured in the talks, the minister answered that Indo-Pacific did not come up during the talks. (ANI)

ALSO READ: From stealth fighters to submarines, China arming Pakistan

Previous Story

Nuclear deal: Tehran reaffirms ‘red lines’

Next Story

Rishi denies wife’s Russia link

Latest from China

DeepSeek draws global flak over Uyghur censorship 

China’s AI model, DeepSeek, is under scrutiny for allegedly promoting state propaganda, censoring sensitive topics, and harvesting personal data, raising global privacy and human rights concerns.  Human rights activists and international experts

China Targets Retired Taiwanese Officers for Espionage

Taiwan’s National Security Bureau reports a sharp rise in espionage prosecutions, with retired officers at the center of China’s infiltration strategy. Taiwan has revealed a disturbing trend in Chinese espionage activities, with
Go toTop

Don't Miss

Afghanistan: Taliban officials targeted in mosque blast

Reports said several local Taliban officials were among those killed

Wuhan: Thousands of retirees take to streets over benefit cuts

The protest came after warnings from the central government in