
Resuming direct flights between China and India has also been agreed upon in principle by both nations. They also made the decision to improve interpersonal relationships, particularly through think tanks and the media.
A recent indication of improving ties between the two most populous nations in the world is the agreement between China and India to resume direct commercial flights for the first time in five years.
When the Covid epidemic first started in early 2020, flights between India and mainland China were prohibited. This suspension persisted after further political unrest. As Indian Foreign Secretary Vikram Misri met with Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi in Beijing on Monday, the statement was made.
The Kailash Mansarovar Yatra, which has been on hold since 2020, will now restart because to an agreement between China and India. Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi and Indian Foreign Secretary Vikram Misri met and came to this decision.
According to a statement from India’s Ministry of External Affairs, the parties will talk about the specifics of starting the yatra again in accordance with previous agreements. They also decided to meet early to talk about the restart of collaboration on trans-border rivers and the sharing of hydrological data.

A Little Recap
Along least twenty Indian and four Chinese soldiers were slain in a brutal hand-to-hand fight along their disputed border high in the Himalayas, months after planes were halted due to the pandemic.
Along their 2,100-mile (3,379-kilometer) de facto boundary, known as the Line of Actual Control (LAC), which has never been formally defined and has continued to be a point of contention since a 1962 war between the two nations, China and India each maintain sizable military forces.