Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

India, China in fresh face-off in Arunachal

THE FACE-OFF TOOK PLACE WHEN RIVAL PATROLS CAME FACE-TOFACE IN A CONTESTED AREA NEAR YANGTSE, WITH SOLDIERS ASKING EACH OTHER TO RETREAT TO THEIR RESPECTIVE SIDES

- Rahul Singh letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: Scores of Indian and Chinese soldiers were involved in a tense face-off along the contested Line of Actual Control (LAC) in Arunachal Pradesh’s sensitive Tawang sector last week, officials familiar with the developmen­t said on Friday. The latest confrontat­ion comes at a time when both sides are planning to hold the next round of military talks to cool tensions in the Ladakh sector.

The face-off took place when rival patrols came face-to-face in a contested area near Yangtse, with the soldiers asking each other to retreat to their respective sides, said one of the officials cited above, asking not to be named.

“The face-off lasted a few hours before the matter was resolved at the level of local commanders,” said a second official.

“Both sides undertake patrolling activities up to their perception of the border. Whenever patrols of both sides physically meet, the situation is managed according to establishe­d protocols and mechanisms. Physical engagement can last for a few hours prior to disengagin­g as per mutual understand­ing. This is routine business,” he said.

The Chinese foreign ministry, however, said it did not have “relevant informatio­n” about the skirmish.

“I am not aware of relevant informatio­n,” Chinese foreign ministry spokespers­on Zhao Lijian said at a regular media briefing.

The latest incident came weeks after Chinese patrols consisting of around 100 soldiers crossed LAC in the central sector in Uttarakhan­d on August 30 and damaged a footbridge before they went back to the other side. The area in which the intrusion took place is manned by the Indo-Tibetan Border Police.

“PLA plans to keep the entire border active so that they can keep reinforcin­g their claims. It can also be an act of creeping assertiven­ess to subsequent­ly lay a claim to these areas,” said

former Northern Army commander Lt Gen BS Jaswal (retd). Last week, Army chief Gen Manoj Mukund Naravane said that next round of military talks with Chinese PLA to reduce tensions along LAC in eastern Ladakh could take place in the second week of October. He said the situation on the LAC was under control and outstandin­g problems with PLA could be resolved through talks. The two armies have been locked in a border standoff for almost 17 months.

Outstandin­g problems at Hot Springs, or Patrolling Point-15, which is one of the friction points on the LAC, could be taken up during the 13th round of talks. The rival armies carried out second round of disengagem­ent in early August when both sides pulled back their forwarddep­loyed troops from Gogra, with the breakthrou­gh coming after the 12th round of talks. Earlier, India and China wrapped up the disengagem­ent process in Pangong Tso area in mid-February, with their armies pulling back forward-deployed troops, tanks, infantry combat vehicles and artillery guns from strategic heights where rival soldiers last year fired shots for first time at LAC.

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