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Indian and Chinese officials discussed resumption directly from passenger air services, but have not established a date. Conversations aim to solve commercial and economic differences, which increases aviation sectors.

Passengers wait at Terminal 2 or Indira Gandhi International Airport in New Delhi. (Image: Reuters)
Indian and Chinese officials have made a round of conversations about the resumption of direct passenger air services, but they have not yet finished a date, officials told the news agency Reuters Mondays. Chinese and Indian officials agreed in January to work to resolve commercial and economic differences and the discussions are expected to promote their aviation sectors.
China has delayed other countries in rebounds of Covid pandemic.
“The Ministry of Civil Aviation and our counterpart in China have had a round of meetings,” said Civil Aviation Secretary Vumlunang Vualnam. Reuters. He made the comments.
There were still some problems to solve, he added, without going into details.
Relationships were grouped between India and China following the clash of 2020 between the troops along its border in the Himalayas.
India imposed restrictions on the Chinese companies that invest in the country, banned hundreds of popular applications and reduced passenger routes, direct load flights continued.
Relationships have shown signs of improvement from an agreement in October to relieve a military confrontation on the mountainous border, the same month as President Xi Jinping and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi made conversations in Russia. India has made it clear that the situation on the border must be calm to foster stronger bilateral relations.