DT Next

Both sides begin withdrawal of troops from Pangong Lake: China

No word from India, but Rajnath expected to make statement in Rajya Sabha today

-

BEIJING/NEW DELHI: The frontline troops of China and India at the south and north banks of the Pangong Lake in eastern Ladakh started “synchronis­ed and organised” disengagem­ent from Wednesday, the Chinese Defence Ministry said, in what is seen as a forward movement in the overall disengagem­ent process to defuse the over nine-month border standoff.

There was no official comment by either the Indian Defence Ministry or the Indian Army on the Chinese statement but people familiar with the developmen­t said both sides are in the process of pulling back their armoured units like tanks and armoured personnel carriers.

The people mentioned above said specific steps like the withdrawal of armoured elements from the friction points were discussed threadbare at the ninth round of high-level military talks on January 24 that lasted for around 16 hours. The office of Defence Minister Rajnath Singh, meanwhile, tweeted that he will make a statement in the Rajya Sabha on Thursday on the situation in eastern Ladakh.

“The Chinese and Indian frontline troops at the southern and northern bank of the Pangong Tso Lake start synchronis­ed and organised disengagem­ent from February

10,” spokespers­on for the Chinese Ministry of National Defence Senior Colonel Wu Qian said in a brief statement in Beijing. The statement did not provide details.

“This move is in accordance with the consensus reached by both sides at the 9th round of

China-India Corps Commander Level Meeting,” it said Separately, a Chinese foreign ministry spokesman said the frontline troops of the Chinese and Indian militaries began to conduct simultaneo­us and planned disengagem­ent in the Pangong Lake area on Wednesday as per consensus reached at a meeting of the foreign ministers of the two countries in Moscow in September and the ninth round of Corps commander-level talks. “We hope the Indian side will work with China to meet each other halfway, strictly implement the consensus reached between the two sides and ensure the smooth implementa­tion of the disengagem­ent process,” Wang Wenbin said in a statement.

“This move is in accordance with the consensus reached by both sides at the 9th round of China-India Corps Commander Level Meeting,” the official added. A source in the Indian military and defence establishm­ent said there has been some “forward movements” but at the same time added that India will only go by what is happening on the ground.

 ??  ?? Pic for representa­tion
Pic for representa­tion

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India