Friday, February 20, 2026
News

EAM Jaishankar discusses India-Japan ties, tourism growth, and challenges with China

SocialTwist Tell-a-Friend    Print this Page   COMMENT

New Delhi | December 6, 2024 1:12:10 PM IST
At the India-Japan Forum Inaugural Session Conversation, EAM S Jaishankar said, "We've never had problems between India and Japan but not having problems doesn't mean everything works well... I would say how do you take good sentiment and make it into a practical plan."

He further mentioned the growing trend of Indian tourists, stating, "When I look today at the kind of spike in Indian tourists... our passport issuer is going up actually at the rate of almost 10 to 15 per cent a year. We are issuing between about 13 million to 15 million passports every year and these are 10-year validities. In this country, foreign travel is growing and interest in foreign tourism is growing but we haven't yet seen any of this directed at Japan. If you look at Southeast Asia, Singapore, Malaysia, Thailand, Gulf, Europe, Indian tourists are really going there in very large numbers."

EAM Jaishankar also reflected on the shared experiences of India and Japan in terms of their proximity to China, noting, "In a way, India and Japan do share the attribute of both being neighbours of China... In our particular case, we had a stable relationship with China. It was growing in many respects, in terms of trade, it was very, very substantial and still is very substantial. There had been a certain amount of investment, mostly from China to India. There were some issues we have which is a very imbalanced trade. We have had a lot of market access issues in China."

The Minister went on to elaborate on the impact of the recent tensions with China, particularly after the border clashes in 2020. He explained, "Our entire relationship with China was predicated on the fact that the border areas would remain peaceful and stable and we had agreements to ensure that. In 2020, the Chinese chose to bring a lot of forces to the border areas and obviously we responded with counter-deployments. Then we had an incident in which a number of soldiers got killed and obviously this impacted the relationship. So it has taken us 4.5 years to negotiate the disengagement of forces, which is really the fact that the militaries are too close at some places along the Line of Actual Control (LAC)."

Jaishankar concluded by emphasising the ongoing challenges in de-escalating the situation with China, stating, "We still have challenges left with us. We still have to de-escalate because what we have done is disengage forces from close proximity but we have a de-escalation because there's still a very large number of forces... Now, we have to sit down and discuss with China how we rebuild our relationship and that is an exercise that still has to be undertaken." (ANI)

 
  LATEST COMMENTS ()
POST YOUR COMMENT
Comments Not Available
 
POST YOUR COMMENT
 
 
TRENDING TOPICS
 
 
CITY NEWS
MORE CITIES
 
 
 
MORE WORLD NEWS
AISC, DGA Group convene industry leaders...
'AI can do many things, but can't yet fi...
Trump gives '10-15 days' ultimatum to Ir...
'Absolutely unacceptable': Israel condem...
Would love to have China, Russia on Boar...
US State Secy Rubio meets Shehbaz Sharif...
More...
 
INDIA WORLD ASIA
Odisha Minister Nityananda Gond inspects...
MP: Drunk car driver hits 7 vehicles, 4 ...
'High Court has made a grave mistake': R...
Plea files in Delhi court seeking monito...
'From 2018, our alliance has been intact...
'Why crazy protocols disrupt important i...
More...    
 
 Top Stories
US State Dept launches Edge AI Pack... 
US State Secy Rubio meets Shehbaz S... 
AISC, DGA Group convene industry le... 
"High Court has made a grave mistak... 
Would love to have China, Russia on... 
Plea files in Delhi court seeking m... 
Odisha Minister Nityananda Gond ins... 
"Absolutely unacceptable": Israel c...