The National Democratic Alliance (NDA) government has given hints that some type of closed door meeting can be expected after communicating its hesitance to take part in an undeniable public conversation on the touchy issue in the monsoon session meeting of Parliament.

An ultimate choice on any such gathering, where the resistance groups would be informed on the military stalemate along the Line of Actual Control (LAC), is yet to be taken, as stated by the functionaries associated with the discussions. The administration hosts have not reached consensus with all resistance groups including the opposition.

The  proposition of such a meeting may be based on the allegations by opposition  that the legislature was avoiding a conversation on the issue in Parliament. Some hints have been given by the government that meetings away from plain view can be conducted on endeavors to standardize the circumstance, and provide answer to questions the opposition may have regarding the matter.

Such a proposition is at an incipient stage and needs further conversation as stated by senior non-NDA leader mentioning secrecy.

Adhir Ranjan Chowdhury, the Congress floor leader in the Lok Sabha, scrutinized the need of such a gathering.

Rajnath Singh announced in Lok Sabha on Tuesday about the Indo-China border circumstance. Questions were not allowed due to absence of question hour. Furious Congress leaders, including Chowdhury and Shashi Tharoor, organized a dissent before the Mahatma Gandhi statue in the Parliament complex.

Government asserts when India and China are trying to realign their border issues, an open discussion set apart by clashing perspectives and reactions is best dodged.

Chowdhury reminded the legislature body that in 1962 when then Opposition leader Atal Bihari Vajpayee had requested a discussion on the Indo-China war, Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru consented to hold a discussion that continued for two days. Minister of Coal, Pralhad Joshi immediately brought up that the 1962 discussion occurred after the war was finished and not when the different sides were attempting to discover an answer.

Different leaders, including the Biju Janata Dal’s Pinaki Mishra and Trinamool Congress’ Kalyan Banerjee, did not support Chowdhury in a typical party vs party clash. Mishra concurred with the administration’s perspective that a troublesome discussion must be kept away.

Minutes before the Parliament meeting began on Monday, Prime Minister talked about the circumstances in the India China issue.

Though the government is trying hard enough to avoid discussing the issue it has indirectly given an acceptance hint that a meeting may take place about the scenario soon behind closed doors.