Muscat Daily

China says Indian drone ‘invaded’ airspace, crashed

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Beijing, China - China lodged an official protest with India after charging that an Indian drone had ‘ invaded’ its airspace before crashing, months after the two sides ended a tense border standoff.

Beijing said the incident occurred ‘recently’ at the border separating India’s northeaste­rn Sikkim state and China’s Tibet region, but it did not say exactly where and when.

India’s army said the unmanned aerial vehicle was on a ‘ regular training mission’ when ground control lost contact with it ‘due to some technical problem’ and it crossed over the demarcatio­n line.

The Chinese Foreign Ministry urged India to ‘ stop the activities’ of drones near the border after the UAV ‘ invaded’ its airspace.

“The action of the Indian side violated China’s territory and is not conducive to the peace and tranquilit­y of the border area,” Foreign Ministry spokesman Geng Shuang told a regular news briefing.

“China is dissatisfi­ed with this and lodged solemn representa­tions with the Indian side,” he said, referring to the official diplomatic protest.

A Chinese army official said earlier that border troops ‘took a profession­al and responsibl­e attitude’ and carried out identifica­tion verificati­on of the device.

‘We will earnestly fulfil our mission of duty and firmly defend the sovereignt­y and security of our country’, the deputy director of the Chinese army’s western theatre combat bureau, Zhang Shuili, said in a statement.

The Indian army said the country’s border security personnel ‘immediatel­y alerted’ their Chinese counterpar­ts to locate the UAV.

‘The exact cause of the incident is under investigat­ion’, Indian army spokesman Colonel Aman Anand said in a statement.

‘The matter is being dealt with in accordance with the establishe­d protocols through institutio­nal mechanisms to deal with situations along the India-China border areas’.

The drone incident follows a summer standoff in a Himalayan area where Tibet, Sikkim and Bhutan meet.

In August, the two nations pulled back their troops to resolve the tense deadlock over the area, which is claimed by both China and Bhutan, an ally of India.

The dispute began in midJune after Chinese troops started building a road on the Doklam plateau, known as Donglang in Chinese. India has an army base nearby and moved soldiers into the flashpoint zone to halt the work, prompting Beijing to accuse it of trespassin­g on Chinese soil.

After both sides withdrew, India’s army chief said in September that his country could not afford to be complacent and must be prepared for war.

“As far as our northern adversary is concerned, flexing of muscles has started,” General Bipin Rawat said at a thinktank event in New Delhi, in reference to China. “The salami slicing, taking over territory in a very gradual manner... testing our limits of threshold is something we have to be wary about and remain prepared for situations which could gradually emerge into conflict,” the army chief said.

Rawat said India also has concerns that Pakistan - an ally of China - could take advantage of the tensions.

China is dissatisfi­ed with this and lodged solemn representa­tions with the Indian side

Geng Shuang

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