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Oct 29, 2025

China and India Hold ‘Active, In-Depth’ Talks to Stabilise Himalayan Border

China and India Hold ‘Active, In-Depth’ Talks to Stabilise Himalayan Border
Defence officials from China and India met on 28–29 October for the 20th round of Corps-Commander-level talks, focusing on de-escalation along the western sector of the Line of Actual Control. Both sides described the dialogue as “active and in-depth,” agreeing to maintain diplomatic and military communication channels.

Since a 2024 disengagement accord, the two neighbours have gradually normalised relations, restarting direct flights and accelerating cross-border trade through Nathula Pass. The latest meeting reviewed progress on creating buffer zones and finalising protocols for patrolling. Analysts say a stable frontier is prerequisite for expanding people-to-people mobility, as lingering security alerts have deterred Chinese investors and Indian tour groups alike.

For companies operating factories in western China or northern India, reduced tensions translate into fewer supply-chain shocks. Logistics operators expect the reopening of key land ports to trim transit times for pharma and automotive components moving between Sichuan and Uttar Pradesh.

Travel risk managers, however, should continue monitoring advisories; neither side has announced a full restoration of visa-issuance capacity for journalists and NGO workers, categories still subject to case-by-case screening.

Next steps include a working-level meeting on confidence-building measures in December and a possible resumption of the Kailash Mansarovar pilgrimage in 2026, which would mark a symbolic breakthrough in controlled cross-border tourism.
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