Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

PLA widens road near Doklam, no strategic impact says India

ADDING INFRA 500 Chinese soldiers present where road being built

- HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: A little over a month after India and China ended a tense border standoff at Doklam near Sikkim, it has emerged that the People’s Liberation Army has begun constructi­ng a road about 10-12km from the site where the two armies were locked in a face-off for 73 days.

Army sources confirmed that the PLA was constructi­ng a road in Chumbi valley but added that the area was under Chinese control and the developmen­t did not have strategic implicatio­ns for India. Around 500 soldiers are present in the area where the road constructi­on is being carried out.

In Doklam, China had accused India of trespass and preventing its troops from building a road in the remote Himalayan plateau that is claimed by both China and Bhutan. The 73-day standoff ended with withdrawal of troops and China removing road-building equipment.

The sources said, “The same equipment and workers are being used to strengthen an existing kutcha road about 10-12 km from the last faceoff site. The area is under their control.”

India and China had agreed to pull back troops to end the months-long Doklam face-off on August 28. The decision put a lid on one of the most serious disputes between the nucleararm­ed neighbours who share a 3,500-km mountain frontier that remains undemarcat­ed in most places.

It came days before Prime Minister Narendra Modi travelled to China to attend a summit of BRICS, a grouping that also includes Brazil, Russia and South Africa. China pulled back its bulldozers and other roadconstr­ucting equipment.

The Doklam standoff between India and China along the Sikkim border was likely to be the new normal, a reputed defence think tank had warned after the standoff, making a strong case for building military capabiliti­es as China respects strength.

In a paper titled Looking Beyond Doklam, the Centre for Joint Warfare Studies (CENJOWS), a think tank set up by the defence ministry a decade ago, said it is crucial for India to demonstrat­e strength as peace along the disputed border or Line of Actual Control (LAC) will be “constantly and continuous­ly” under stress with “increase in frequency, intensity and depth of (Chinese) transgress­ions leading to more and more standoffs”.

SOURCES CONFIRMED PLA WAS CONSTRUCTI­NG A ROAD IN CHUMBI VALLEY BUT ADDED THAT THE AREA WAS UNDER CHINESE CONTROL

 ?? AFP ?? In Doklam, China had accused India of trespass and preventing its troops from building a road in the area also claimed by Bhutan.
AFP In Doklam, China had accused India of trespass and preventing its troops from building a road in the area also claimed by Bhutan.

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