Doklam standoff: China rejects reports of offering to relocate troops

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NEWS : China
has vehemently rejected all reports of it ever offering a compromise to India
by relocating its troops in the disputed Doklam
border area.
The Chinese Foreign Ministry
reacted to a report where China had allegedly offered to move its troops back
100 meters, after India sought the pullback of Chinese troops by 250 metres.
The Spokesperson's Office told
China Daily that the report is not true, adding that "China will not trade
its territorial sovereignty under any circumstances."
"China's position on solving
this incident is clear and firm. India must immediately and unconditionally
withdraw all its trespassing troops and equipment back to the Indian side of
the border," the office said in a statement.
China could never accept India's
"totally unreasonable" demand, said Zhao Xiaozhuo, a researcher at
the PLA Academy of Military Science told China Daily, adding that India had
honored the convention until Prime Minister Narendra Modi's administration
refused.
Earlier this month, the Chinese
Foreign Ministry said that India's 'intrusion' had not only violated China's
territorial sovereignty but also challenged Bhutan's sovereignty and
independence.
However, the Government of Bhutan
on Thursday pointedly refuted a Chinese Foreign Ministry claim that Bhutan had
conveyed through diplomatic channels to China that the trilateral border
stand-off area in Doklam in the Sikkim sector is not its territory.
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