Deccan Chronicle

China copters spotted flying close to LAC

Experts say incident is not unusual; tension is palpable

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New Delhi, May 12: Tension is simmering along the India-China border with troops of the two countries maintainin­g a close watch on each other in the Pangong Tso lake area in Eastern Ladakh, days after nearly 250 soldiers from both sides were engaged in a violent faceoff that left many of them injured, sources have confirmed.

At least a couple of Chinese military helicopter­s were spotted flying close to the un-demarcated Sino-India border in the area after the fierce face-off on May 5 following which a fleet of Sukhoi-30 jets of the Indian Air Force too carried out sorties there, the sources said.

The troops on both sides held on to their respective positions and even reinforcem­ents were brought in an apprehensi­on of further escalation in tension, the sources said when asked about the face-off.

They said tension was still prevailing in the area, though both sides agreed to disengage during a meeting of local commanders on May 6.

“The situation remains tense,” said a source adding some troops are being kept by both sides in the area following the face-off.

When asked, an Army spokespers­on said: “Incidents of face-off and aggressive behaviour occur on the Line of Actual Control (LAC). Patrols disengage after local level interactio­n and dialogue. Temporary and short duration face-offs occur as boundary is not resolved.”

“I clarify that there is no continuing face-off at the Pangong Tso lake. There

Incidents of face-off and aggressive behaviour occur on the Line of Actual Control (LAC). Patrols disengage after local level interactio­n and dialogue... I clarify that there is no continuing face-off at the Pangong Tso lake. There is no build-up of armed troops in the area

— ARMY SPOKESMAN

is no build-up of armed troops in the area,” he said.

The sources said the spotting of Chinese helicopter­s in the area was nothing unusual as India too flies a fleet of military choppers in the area from three bases in the region.

Sources in the Indian Air Force (IAF) said a range of its aircraft, which also comprises Sukhoi-30 jets, have been carrying out routine sorties in the region including on May 6, adding there was no violation of Indian airspace in the area by the Chinese side.

The IAF conducts routine sorties in the region from Leh and Thoise airbases.

On May 5, scores of Indian and Chinese army personnel clashed with iron rods, sticks, and even resorted to stone-pelting, sources said, adding a number of soldiers on both sides sustained injuries in the incident.

In a separate incident, nearly 150 Indian and Chinese military personnel were engaged in a face-off near Naku La Pass in the Sikkim sector of the Sino-India border on Saturday. At least 10 soldiers from both sides sustained injuries in the incident.

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