Business Standard

CHINESE TROOPS STEPPING UP ACTIVITY NEAR ARUNACHAL

- AJAI SHUKLA SANJEEB MUKHERJEE

With Chinese and Indian troops eyeball-to-eyeball at seven places inside India’s claimed territory in Ladakh and Sikkim, China’s People’s Liberation Army (PLA) has begun stepping up activity opposite Arunachal Pradesh as well.

Indian government sources say PLA troops here are reinforcin­g their posts in large numbers, increasing their patrolling, and stepping up violations of the Indian border, which in Arunachal Pradesh runs along the Mcmahon Line.

The two sectors that are seeing the most PLA activity are Tawang and Walong — both of which bore the brunt of the Chinese offensive in 1962.

In the Tawang area, PLA patrols have come up to India’s Old Khinzemane post on two occasions, and accosted the Indian troops there. Khinzemane is right on the Mcmahon Line and was the point at which the Dalai Lama entered India after escaping from Lhasa in March 1959.

Khinzemane is located close to the Namka Chu river, where the Chinese launched the 1962 war with their first massed attacks on thinly held Indian defences.

Also in the Tawang sector, the PLA has reinforced its base camp at Tsona Dzong, the main Tibetan border town located across the Mcmahon Line from Tawang.

In the Walong sector, which is at the easternmos­t tip of India, sources report aggressive activity from Chinese patrols at the Indian border post of

Kibithoo. The PLA patrols, which have been coming right up to the border, are far more frequent and now include more than 40 soldiers in each — almost

twice the number in normal times.

The PLA camp at Old Tatu, across the border from Kibithoo, has also been heavily reinforced. There are also reports of heavy reinforcem­ents being moved to Rima, the border town across the Mcmahon Line from Walong.

There is also aggressive Chinese activity in the Asaphila sector, which the Chinese attacked and captured in the 1962 war. Over preceding days, there have been multiple PLA incursions across the Mcmahon Line here, say sources. The Chinese have establishe­d temporary camps, just across the border from the Kepang La and Sying La passes.

In the Upper Siang border district, where the Tsang Po river flows into India and becomes the Siang, and then the Brahmaputr­a, there have been a large number of border transgress­ions in recent days.

India’s military intelligen­ce is assessing whether the PLA is reinforcin­g the sector to guard against the eventualit­y of an Indian attack, or whether the Chinese have plans to occupy Indian territory here as it did in Ladakh.

While there has been no occupation of Indian territory in Arunachal Pradesh yet, as there has in Ladakh, the Army taking the Chinese activity seriously. In Ladakh, in April, the army misread PLA activity as routine training. It is determined not to make the same mistake in Arunachal Pradesh.

The seven areas in Ladakh that have Chinese troops squatting on Indian territory are: Bottleneck in the Depsang area; Jeevan Nullah, the Y-nullah in the Galwan River valley; Patrolling Point (PP)-15 in Galwan; Gogra Heights at PP-17; Chushul, and the north bank of Pangong Lake up to Finger 4.

Days after the lockdown was announced, the Centre started distributi­ng 5 kg of free foodgrain per month for April, May, and June, to 800 million beneficiar­ies of the National Food Security Act. The government also promised 1 kg of free pulses to 223 million ration card holders (per family) during the period. It later announced extra grains for migrants under the Atmanirbha­r package for May and June, along with 1 kg of free gram dal. As the distributi­on period for the packages nears its end, Business Standard takes stock of the progress so far.

Pulses required

 ?? PHOTO: PTI ?? An Indian Air Force fighter jet in Leh on Monday
PHOTO: PTI An Indian Air Force fighter jet in Leh on Monday

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