Sanjha Morcha

Love & legacy A fighting princess, a forged will, inheritance worth Rs 20,000 crore; here’s the story of Faridkot’s Rajkumari Amrit Kaur, who won a 28-year-long battle royale

Love & legacy

aja Harinder Singh of Faridkot; Amrit Kaur, eldest daughter of Raja Harinder Singh of Faridkot; With Maj Harpal Singh, photographed on board RMS Queen Elizabeth.

Roopinder Singh

Graceful, soft-spoken and alert, 86-year-old Amrit Kaur, Rajkumari of Faridkot, is regal, as she ought to be. The eldest daughter of Raja Harinder Singh of Faridkot spent her childhood in her father’s palaces. Naturally, she was raised by governesses, who ensured that along with regular education, she would also learn singing, embroidery and playing the piano. The princess particularly remembers her governess, the Australian Miss Foley, who wanted porridge for breakfast every day. “Before the Partition, she went to Lahore and saw violence and killings there. She came back and packed her bags”.

College friends: (From left) Rajman, Amrit, Gursmat, Surjit and Ajit.Photo taken at the Kinsey Brothers studio, Shimla.

Amrit Kaur’s brother, Harmohinder Singh, and her sisters Deepinder Kaur and Maheepinder Kaur, all lived their early lives in Faridkot palaces of their father. Amrit Kaur has fond memories of her father.

A princess remembers

“My father was a gentle person. If he wanted you to do something, he would sit you down and talk to you. On the other hand, my mother, Rani Narinder Kaur, was a strict disciplinarian. Clothes had to be folded and kept just so! She would check the cupboards to ensure that this was done!”

Her father ensured that she learnt how to ride a horse. Like so many other beginners, she fell down, and was promptly put back in the saddle! Soon she became a good rider.

Raja Harinder Singh also had a legendary collection of cars, and he taught her how to drive, in the Raj Mahal, naturally. “He sat next to me in a small car and said, ‘Drive.’ I saw that my grandmother and mother had just stepped out for a walk, and I started looking at them to see if they were looking at me. I nearly rammed into a wall! I got a reprimand, recovered, and finally, I learnt driving. I didn’t have a licence. Eventually, my husband got me one.”

The parents ensured that their children got conventional education after home schooling. She did her Matric, and then enrolled for FA and BA at St Bede’s, Shimla. The nuns were strict at this all-girls college. The boarders bonded, especially her group of friends. “There were five of us, and we sat on one table for all of our meals.” They kept in touch with each other. Two of them, Gursmat Sandhawalia and Ajit Sanghera, live in Chandigarh.

One time, they slipped out of the hostel, rented cycles and went to the Mashobra estate of her grandmother, where “the gardener was very kind. He gave us a bunch of roses.” Her massi (aunt), who was also in college at the time and had accompanied them, said she would keep the bunch on her cycle. Unfortunately, she fell from the bicycle, the handle hit her so badly that she almost stopped breathing. Her friends Ajit and Surjit, being doctors’ daughters, took charge and pumped her chest. It worked, and soon they were able to complete their trip, return the cycles, and make it back to college before breakfast. “It was Sunday, so it was half-an-hour later, at 8 am”, she recalls. She played the piano and engaged in extra-curricular activities. She graduated with a BA degree from the college at 18.

A new beginning

In 1952, she would marry Major Harpal Singh. We refer to the Faridkot Gazetteer of 1915 for his background: “The Sardars of Machaki are Sekhon Jats…. Colonel Sardar Harnam Singh, who is Commandant of the Faridkot IS Sappers, is now with the company at the Front….”

Col Harnam Singh had earned laurels in World War I. His son, Major Harpal Singh, served in World War II on the Burma Front. He joined the Faridkot Police in 1946, and at the time of their marriage, was Raja Harinder Singh’s aide-de-camp. Amrit Kaur’s family did not approve.

“That did not last long. My mother always had cordial relations with her brother and sisters, and we stayed at Kenilworth (in the Mashobra estate of Raja Harinder Singh) with our grandfather, in Faridkot and Delhi with the family and attended family weddings,” says Gurveen Kaur, Amrit’s daughter.

Harpal Singh was inducted into the Indian Police Service (IPS) in 1954. The couple spent the ensuing years in Jalandhar, Patiala, Kapurthala and Shimla, wherever he was posted. He served at various times as AIG Traffic, Deputy Director National Police Academy, Border Security Force (BSF), Deputy Inspector-General (DIG) Haryana Police, held a diplomatic assignment in the USA, and as Director-General of the Vigilance, Haryana State Electricity Board.

Starting with Faridkot as a state in the British-ruled India, he saw the Partition, creation of Pepsu, which merged into Punjab, and then the trifurcation of Punjab into Himachal Pradesh, Punjab and Haryana. He was allotted the Haryana cadre. Prof Karuna Goswamy recollects how he was close to her uncle, Ashwani Kumar, the celebrated police officer. “He was a man full of energy, and my uncle relied on him,” she says.

As Amrit Kaur talks about him, her love and affection for her husband comes through with full force. She remembers the postings, and takes pride in recounting his professional achievements and accomplishments. We look at the picture of a UN General Assembly session on August 13, 1958, in which he stands out with his turban. The Indian delegation was led by Permanent Representative Arthur S Lall. “US President ‘Ike’ Eisenhower addressed the General Assembly. Later, it was remarked that ‘for a multinational gathering, the delegates (except for a bearded Sikh) all looked terribly alike in drab sack suits’,” she recounts fondly. The session was triggered by the US intervention in Beirut in July that year and the deteriorating security situation in Lebanon and Jordan. They lived in a tony address on 84 Street, off Central Park in Manhattan, New York.

A year later, they were in Rohtak! “We had three-four good friends there, and a year later, we took leave and went to Kashmir.” The Princess navigated many such vicissitudes in her life. From palaces to government accommodations, the family made the best of circumstances. “She is a person of great refinement and has the ability to manage situations with élan,” asserts Prof Karuna Goswamy.

Their children received the best education they could and did well. Their son, Jaskaran Singh was born in 1954 in Ambala. He enrolled in Mathematics Honours at St Stephen’s, Delhi. He was enrolled for the LLB course when he took an exam and joined the SBI with two of his college mates. Now retired and settled in Loughton, Essex, he has worked with Barclays and Lloyds banks.

Daughter Simar Negi, who retired as Principal Chief Commissioner of Income Tax, Delhi, too, was born in Ambala in 1955. The youngest Gurveen Kaur was born in 1962. A lawyer, she was Additional Advocate General, Punjab. She lives with her mother and recollects that her first camera was gifted to her by her grandfather.

“Amrit Kaur is known to be very well turned out. She is chic, not skin-deep, but extremely nice,” says Prof Karuna Goswamy. The recent lockdown provided the family with another opportunity to be together. The daughters were with their mother while Jaskaran, who had gone back to the UK from India just before the lockdown, is now with his family there. However, the estate of the Raja of Faridkot is still locked down. It is under litigation and Amrit Kaur politely declines to discuss the case since the matter is sub-judice.

Matter of honour

“I am not fighting for money, I am fighting for my honour, to show that my father could not disinherit me,” Senior Advocate Manjit Singh Khaira, recalls Amrit Kaur saying. “She fought for 28 years to prove her father’s love for her. The will was forged, and we proved it,” says Khaira, who led the case from the trial court to the high court.

Amrit Kaur is the only survivor of her generation. Her brother, the heir apparent, died in 1981. Her sister, Maheepinder Kaur, died in 2002. Both were not married. Deepinder Kaur, who lived in Kolkata and was the chairman of the Maharawal Khewaji Trust, died in 2018. She is survived by a daughter and son. The latter now heads the trust.

Amrit Kaur’s family has spent a long time in Chandigarh. They are very much a part of the social scene and maintain a discrete profile. In her college friend Ajit Sanghera’s words, “She is a humble, generous person who is ready to help anyone.”

A lifetime of experiences and decades of litigation sit lightly on the shoulders of the gentle lady who has carved a place for herself in a world that has dramatically changed since the time she was born as the eldest child of Colonel H.H. Farzand-i-Saadat-i-Nishan-i-Hazrat-i-Kaiser-i-Hind Raja Sir Harinder Singh, Brar Bans Sahib Bahadur, Raja of Faridkot, KCSI.

FIGHT FOR ROYAL INHERITANCE

DATELINE

1989: Raja of Faridkot, Harinder Singh Brar dies. His purported ‘will’ is made public, bequeathing his properties to the Maharawal Khewaji Trust which his younger daughter Deepinder Kaur heads.

1992: His elder daughter Amrit Kaur, who’s been kept out of the ‘will’, moves court against the ‘will’.

2013: Civil court holds the will as fraudulent. Maharawal Khewaji Trust and a nephew file appeals.

2020: The Punjab and Haryana High Court upholds the civil court judgment, awards 37.5% share in the estimated Rs20,000-crore property to Amrit Kaur and Deepinder Kaur; 25% of the share goes to the descendents of Manjit Inder Singh, brother of Raja Harinder Singh.


Govt grants emergency financial powers to three services The special financial powers had been given to the forces to procure weapons and military hardware at short notice

Govt grants emergency financial powers to three services

New Delhi, June 21

The government has granted the three services emergency financial powers of up to Rs 500 crore per procurement project to buy ammunition and weapons in view of the escalating border standoff with China, government sources said Sunday.

The special financial powers had been given to the forces to procure weapons and military hardware at short notice to enhance their operational preparedness along the Line of Actual Control (LAC), they said.

The government has also relaxed certain rules to cut delays in a military purchase like allowing the three services to procure required weapons and equipment from a single vendor, the sources said.

Twenty Indian Army soldiers were killed in a violent clash in eastern Ladakh’s Galwan Valley on June 15, triggering a massive escalation in tension between the two countries.

Defence Minister Rajnath Singh has already directed the Army, the Indian Navy and the Indian Air Force to enhance their operational readiness along the LAC, the 3,500 km de-facto border between India and China, amid fears of fresh confrontation.

Military sources said the Army is going to use the emergency financial powers to expand its stock of ammunition as there is little possibility of any resolution of the standoff soon.

“The three services have been given emergency financial powers of up to Rs 500 crore per procurement project,” said a source.

The clash in Galwan Valley was the worst cross border confrontation between the two sides in 45 years. China’s People’s Liberation Army has not yet talked about the number of casualties it suffered.

The Chinese soldiers used stones, nail-studded sticks, iron rods and clubs in carrying out brutal attacks on Indian soldiers after they protested the erection of a surveillance post by China on the Indian side of the Line of Actual Control in Galwan.

The two armies were engaged in a standoff in Galwan and several other areas of eastern Ladakh since May 5 when their troops clashed on the banks of the Pangong Tso.

The situation in eastern Ladakh deteriorated after around 250 Chinese and Indian soldiers were engaged in a violent face-off on May 5 and 6. The incident in Pangong Tso was followed by a similar incident in north Sikkim on May 9.

Prior to the clashes, both sides had been asserting that pending the final resolution of the boundary issue, it was necessary to maintain peace and tranquillity in the border areas. PTI


Pakistan drone carrying arms shot down in Kathua

Pakistan drone carrying arms shot down in Kathua

Jammu/Kathua, June 20

The Border Security Force (BSF) today shot down a Pakistan drone strapped with arms along the International Border at Rathua village in Hiranagar sector of J&K’s Kathua district early today.

NS Jamwal, IG BSF (Jammu frontier)

Big breakthrough: BSF

This is a big breakthrough for the BSF as people (Pak forces) on the other side have been adopting a similar modus operandi in Punjab also.

A US-made M4 semi-automatic rifle, two magazines with 60 rounds and seven M67 Chinese grenades were found mounted on the drone. A radio signal receiver, two GPS devices and four batteries were also recovered. The incident took place at 5.15 am. According to a senior BSF official, a patrol team of 19 Battalion noticed a “hexa copter” flying from the Pakistan side in the Pansar border outpost area.

“The drone was flying at a height of 150 feet inside the Indian territory. The troops reacted swiftly and fired 8-9 rounds, bringing it down. On recovery, it was found to be a China-made 17.5-kg hexa copter (8 ft x 6.2 ft) with heavy payload capacity,” he said.

The official said the 6-kg arms consignment was apparently to be delivered at a border village in Hiranagar sector. The BSF officials took it in their possession and informed senior officials, he said.

The BSF intelligence branch had been receiving inputs about possible use of drones to ferry arms from Pakistan. “Accordingly, the troops were put on high alert and the border domination was exponentially increased.”

NS Jamwal, IG, BSF (Jammu Frontier), said: “The drone was launched from the Pakistan side and the arms were apparently meant for delivery at one of the villages or settlements along the border.” — TNS

 


Vigil up as China lines up more jets, bombers Beijing has made additions at Hotan, Ngyari and Shigatse

Vigil up as China lines up more jets, bombers

Ajay Banerjee

Tribune News Service

New Delhi, June 21

China has added numbers to its air-based offensive platforms along the Line of Actual Control (LAC) in Ladakh. It has also ramped up aggression and vigil to prevent Indian troops from patrolling east of “Finger 4” in the north of Pangong Tso.

India has also ramped up preparations on its side as the two armies remain fully deployed along the 826-km front of the LAC in Ladakh.

Both sides are expected to facilitate another meeting of their lieutenant general-level officers in the coming week. A similar meeting was held on June 6. Major general-level officers of both armies were asked to hold talks to reduce tension. However, on the intervening night of June 15 and 16, a deadly clash resulted in the killing 20 Indian troops, besides casualties to the People’s Liberation Army (PLA).

Indian agencies have noticed deployment of additional fighter jets, bombers and attack helicopters at four bases close to the LAC. Such additions have been noticed at Hotan in Xinjiang (just north of Ladakh), Ngyari (around 100 km south-east of Ladakh) and Shigatse (150 km north of Sikkim). There has also been PLA movement at Nyingchi, north of Arunachal Pradesh.

At Pangong Tso, the attempt of the PLA is to alter the LAC unilaterally. Armour and artillery buildup has also been done at Gogra Hot Springs.

Indian positions at Depsang, Murgo, Galwan, Hot Springs, Koyul, Fukche and Demchok face enhanced threat from the PLA.

India has added Apache helicopters, Sukhoi fighter jets and tanks along the LAC. The latest to be added is a division of the Indian Army that is otherwise kept ready for any contingency. After being acclimatised for over two weeks to undertake any operation at an altitude of over 14,000 feet, it is now being deployed.

In all, a total of three divisions now form an arc and are ready to respond.


Ready for any situation along LAC: IAF Chief

Ready for any situation along LAC: IAF Chief

Tribune news Service

New Delhi, June 20

Air Chief Marshal RKS Bhadauria today said that the IAF was well prepared and suitably deployed to respond to any contingency along the Line of Actual Control (LAC).

The Air Force Chief was speaking after reviewing the passing-out parade of officers at the IAF Academy, Dundigal, around 40 km from Hyderabad. “I assure the nation that we are determined to deliver and will never let the sacrifice of our braves of Galwan go in vain,” he said.

“I salute the act of Col Santosh Babu and his men in defending the LAC. It shows our resolve,” he said.

In spite of unacceptable Chinese actions in violation of agreements reached during military talks and the resultant loss of life, all efforts were underway to ensure that the current situation along LAC was resolved peacefully, he added. — TNS

 


US talking to India and China, will try and help them out: Trump They’ve come to blows, and we’ll see what happens. We’ll try and help them out: Trump

US talking to India and China, will try and help them out: Trump

he United states is talking to both India and China to help them resolve their ongoing border tensions, President Donald Trump said on Saturday.

Washington, June 21

The United states is talking to both India and China to help them resolve their ongoing border tensions, President Donald Trump said on Saturday.

“It’s a very tough situation. We’re talking to India. We’re talking to China. They’ve got a big problem there,” Trump told reporters at the White House before boarding Marine 1 on his way to his first post-COVID19 election rally in Oklahoma.

“They’ve come to blows, and we’ll see what happens. We’ll try and help them out,” Trump said when asked about his assessment of the situation between India and China.

Over the past few days, the entire Trump Administration has rallied behind India against the illegitimate incursions of the Chinese Army into the Indian side of the Line of Actual Control in Eastern Ladakh.

As many as 20 Indian soldiers achieved martyrdom in fierce clashes against Chinese intruders into Galwan Valley in Ladakh early this week. Indians, according to US intelligence sources, killed more than 35 Chinese soldiers during the skirmish.

The United States has accused China of escalating border tension with India and other neighbours by trying to take benefit of these countries busy fighting coronavirus pandemic.

“The PLA (People’s Liberation Army) has escalated border tensions with India, the world’s most populous democracy. It’s militarizing the South China Sea and illegally claiming more territory there, threatening vital sea lanes,” US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said, in a major speech on China a day earlier.

In his virtual address on ‘Europe and the China Challenge’ during the 2020 Copenhagen Democracy Summit on Friday, Pompeo described the ruling Chinese Communist Party as a ‘rogue actor.’

Early this week, White House Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany said the president is aware of the situation and the US is monitoring the situation between Indian and Chinese forces along the line of actual control in Eastern Ladakh.

During a phone call on June 2nd that Trump had with Prime Minister Modi, they did discuss the situation on the Indo-China border, McEnany said.

“Trump and Modi have a terrific relationship and trust between them,” Al Mason, co-chair of the Trump Victory Indian American Finance Committee said, adding that the statements coming from the White House, the State Department and the US Embassy in New Delhi is reflective of this.

Coming out in support of India, Texas Congressman Lance Gooden said that China cannot be trusted.

“As more news comes out about the deadly conflict between China and India, once again CHINA appears to be an aggressive bad actor,” the Republican Congressman said.

“The CCP (Chinese Communist Party) cannot be taken at their word, EVER,” Gooden said in a tweet.

On the Senate floor, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said that “on land, for the sake of grabbing territory, the PLA appears to have instigated the most violent clash between China and India since those nations went to war in 1962”.

Needless to say, the rest of the world has watched with grave concern this violent exchange between two nuclear states. We are encouraging de-escalation and hoping for peace,” McConnell said.

Assistant Secretary for East Asian and Pacific Affairs David Stilwell earlier said that this Chinese activity is similar to activity the world has seen in the past on border disputes with the Peoples Republic of China.

“I would point you to those – I think it was 2015 when Xi Jinping traveled to India the first time,” he said.

“The PLA (People’s Liberation Army) invaded this contested area deeper and longer, with more people, than ever before historically. Whether that was a negotiating tactic or just a punch in the nose to demonstrate their superiority, I don’t know,” he told reporters early this week.

“But then we saw the Doklam issue down near Bhutan, where we saw similar concerns.  I wish I knew. Again, we don’t have a lot of visibility and we don’t have a lot of open dialogue with our Chinese counterparts, and honestly I’d like to see more of that if we can,” Stillwell said.

US experts feel that the latest Chinese behavior will swing India towards US.

“Even before the latest flareup, a majority of Indian strategists saw Chinese assertiveness as India’s biggest foreign-policy challenge. This has resulted in an unspoken but unmistakable swing toward the US,” Jeff Smith from The Heritage Foundation think tank said.

“The bullying of US partners and allies needs to come at a cost,” Smith said in a tweet.


Unacceptable, China’s claim on Galwan: MEA PMO clarifies as Opposition questions Modi’s ‘no intrusion’ remark

Unacceptable, China’s claim on Galwan: MEA

Sandeep Dikshit

Tribune News Service

New Delhi, June 20

India’s position with regard to the Galwan valley has been historically clear, the Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) on Saturday said, rejecting China’s claim of sovereignty over the area.

The PM’s observations that there was no Chinese presence on our side of the LAC pertained to the situation as a consequence of the bravery of our armed forces, who foiled an attempt by Chinese troops to transgress into the Galwan valley — PMO

At the same time, India maintained that the skirmish on June 15-16 took place after Chinese troops entered its side of the Line of Actual Control (LAC) in the valley for the second time. In response to Chinese Foreign Ministry’s “step-by-step” version of the Galwan valley incident, the MEA said the violence flared up when Indian troops resisted an attempt by the PLA to raise structures.

Indian student in china in soup over ‘offensive’ post

A Chinese university has threatened to take action against an Indian student for allegedly posting offensive comments against the Chinese people on social media, a media report said. The Indian national is a student at the Jiangsu University in east China’s Jiangsu province. PTI

Refuting Chinese assertions that the valley was located on its side of the LAC, MEA spokesperson Anurag Srivastava said: “Attempts by the Chinese side are not acceptable. They are not in accordance with China’s own position in the past.” However, India made no claim of its own with Srivastava simply stating that “the position with regard to the Galwan valley area has been historically clear.”

Rahul Gandhi, Congress

Posers to govt

If the land was Chinese, why were our soldiers killed and where were they killed?

Countering two other allegations, he said Indian troops had never undertaken any action across the LAC and that all infrastructure built for the purpose by India was “naturally on its own side’’.

Sitaram Yechury, CPM

What else did the PM say at the all-party meeting which he did not mean? Sacrifices of our soldiers should not be reduced to vote-bank politics,Mr Modi.

He said the Chinese troops had been hindering India’s patrolling pattern in the area for over a month and this led to a faceoff which was addressed by the ground commanders. Earlier Chinese attempts to cross the LAC in other areas of the Western Sector too were rebuffed, leading to talks between senior commanders on June 6, who agreed on de-escalation and disengagement. But the Chinese side departed from this understanding and for the second time tried to erect structures. The Chinese troops turned to violent action when this attempt was foiled, Srivastava explained.

PC Chidambaram, Congress

If no Chinese troops are in Indian territory, why did the Foreign Minister’s statement and by the MEA demand restoration of status quo ante?

.

Separately, the Prime Minister’s Office said a “mischievous interpretation” was being made of the PM’s remarks at the Friday all-party meeting that there was neither intrusion nor capture of any post. With the Congress-led Opposition and strategic community joining issue over the remarks, the PMO in a statement said: “The Prime Minister’s observations that there was no Chinese presence on our side of the LAC pertained to the situation as a consequence of the bravery of our armed forces.The sacrifices of the soldiers of the 16 Bihar Regiment foiled the attempt of the Chinese side to erect structures and also cleared the attempted transgression at this point of the LAC on that day.”

Akhilesh Yadav, SP

Is Galwan valley Indian or not? We don’t need clarifications. We need the truth

The statement sought to contextualise the remarks as ever since the statement there were more questions across social media as to what was the violent clash of June 15 about that led to loss of 20 Indian soldiers if there was no intrusion or capture.


Ladakh, scenic Himalayan desert at the centre of most fierce India-China conflict in 53 yrs

A file photo of Pangong Lake in Ladakh | Visharad Saxena | Special arrangement

A file photo of Pangong Lake in Ladakh | Visharad Saxena | Special arrangement
When the United Nations Security Council held a discussion on Kashmir on 16 August last year — the first since 1965 — many in the security establishment in Jammu and Kashmir began to speculate over the swift Chinese backing to Pakistan. Islamabad had gone to the UN over the Narendra Modi government’s decision to scrap Article 370 and bifurcate the erstwhile state into the Union Territories of J&K and Ladakh. 

The murmurs amplified when China unsuccessfully attempted to call for another UNSC meeting on Kashmir in December 2019. Security officials began to discuss how the diplomatic tussle would translate or manifest on the ground.

The speculations ended on 15 June when, following a month-long stand-off in Ladakh’s Galwan Valley and several clashes with sticks and stones, a physical combat resulted in the death of 20 Indian soldiers, including a Colonel. The unprecedented developments in the mostly uninhabited snowy deserts is why Ladakh is ThePrint’s Newsmaker of the Week.

Also read: Xi has thrown the gauntlet at Modi. He can pick it up like Nehru, or try something new


Why Ladakh matters

Domain experts, journalists and former Army officials have analysed the strategic importance of Ladakh to India and China.

For China, it is not limited to territorial dominance over the Galwan Valley alone. The barren landscape of Ladakh is yet to be fully explored for natural resources and the region is crucial to both India and China’s plans to boost their respective economies.

The location itself offers strategic advantage throughout the Himalayan region. Aksai Chin, formerly part of Ladakh before the Chinese occupation following the 1962 war, connects the Xinjiang Province of China to Tibet, which China annexed in 1950 and remains a site of political contestation.

It is not surprising that India’s activities near the Line of Actual Control (LAC) in the past decade have been a source of concern for China. The decision to make Ladakh a separate Union Territory and bring it under direct control of New Delhi aligns with the Modi government’s ambitions to develop the region and get vindication for its stand on how previous central and J&K governments had neglected the region and how the BJP rescued it.

India reactivating its airfields in Daulat Beg Oldi (DBO), Fukche, and Nyoma to reduce reliance on Leh as the main air support hub for Ladakh, needs to be seen in this context. India has invested heavily in the 255-km Darbuk-Shayok-DBO road construction, which allows it to access Aksai Chin with ease.

Aksai Chin is also crucial to China’s access to the Central Asia regions — specifically, the ambitious China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (part of its Eurasian Belt and Road Initiative), which spans Aksai Chin-Gilgit Baltistan (PoK)-Balochistan. Any change in the status quo in the volatile Himalayan region of Jammu, Kashmir or Ladakh threatens the plausibility of BRI, an initiative that President Xi Jinping has himself been pushing.

Xi’s ambitious business project is also seen as an effort to replicate the historic silk trade routes, of which Ladakh was an important part.


Also read: India changes rules of engagement at LAC after Galwan Valley clash


Is local economy a factor?

If it wasn’t for the current skirmishes in the Galwan Valley, Ladakh would continue to be discussed for its scenic beauty and be populated by tourists from all over India. The economy of the region depends heavily on tourism and construction contracts provided by the security forces. The tourism industry received a shot in the arm after the climax of a famous Bollywood movie, 3 Idiots, was shot at the serene Pangong Lake, turning it into a popular tourism hub overnight. 

But heavy presence of defence forces means contractual work all year round. Not only are the local people provided with contracts to build infrastructure, labourers, both local and non-local, are provided with employment opportunities. As recently as on Monday, more than 1,500 labourers from Jharkhand, who had reached home after bracing the coronavirus lockdown, were brought back to Ladakh in a special train for road construction-related works along the LAC.   

Another major source of income is the world famous Pashmina shawls, which come from the Pashmina goats that Ladakh farmers rear in areas such as Zanskar, Nubra and Changthang. In Changthang alone, where the Changpa tribe live, there are more than 2.5 lakh Pashmina goats and are the only source of income for about 1,200 families.


Also read: To hit China, aim carefully. Don’t shoot yourself in the foot


Mao’s imprint

So, when contextualising the current Chinese fortification of the Galwan Valley, it is important to locate it in the game for dominance over the Himalayan region.

Mao Zedong, the founder of People’s Republic of China, had famously described Tibet as China’s “right hand’s palm” and Ladakh, Nepal, Sikkim, Bhutan and Arunachal Pradesh as the “five fingers”, which he wanted to “liberate”.

China’s ‘two steps forward, one step back’ and salami-slicing policies to expand into contested territories are just a manifestation of Mao’s thoughts, and security officials responsible for the upkeep of the LAC know this very well.

The capturing of Aksai Chin, Pakistan’s decision to cede territory to China in 1963, and now the claim over Galwan Valley, as one senior security official said, are all part of China’s grand strategy to fulfil Mao’s quest by 2048.


Also read: Rammanohar Lohia was right about China. And was neither jingoist nor idealist


China’s vocal stand

So, does the Chinese plan point towards a turbulent time in Ladakh, a region that has remained largely peaceful even when Jammu and Kashmir was hit by an insurgency that refuses to die down after 30 years?

Ladakh, with a population of over 2.7 lakh, of which Muslims comprise nearly 46 per cent and Buddhists about 40 per cent, has not witnessed major conflicts other than the main fault line, which was over the demands of making it a Union Territory.

The demand was overwhelmingly supported by the Buddhist population, which, coupled with the abrogation of Article 370 and the subsequent release of the new map of Ladakh, might just have finally irked China.

The Chinese have made themselves a more vocal “stakeholder” in the Kashmir conflict, which wasn’t the case in the past.

There is, however, a section of intellectuals and political experts, who, like many in the J&K security establishment, believe that the Chinese did not need the abrogation of Article 370 to further its agenda. For them, China is doing what it does — expand.

On possible reasons behind the Chinese aggression in Ladakh, a prominent political commentator based in Kashmir, during an informal chat, quoted English mountaineer George Mallory’s famous response to why he wanted to climb the Mount Everest. Mallory, back in the 1920s, had responded, “Because it is there”.

So why did the Chinese advance into Ladakh? Because it is there.

Views are personal.


IAF deploys Apache attack helicopters and Chinooks in Ladakh, increases combat air patrols

Apaches were brought to provide close air support to the ground forces, while Chinooks were brought to enable faster deployment of troops and equipment.

An Apache helicopter

n Apache attack helicopter (representational image) | Commons
New Delhi: The Indian Air Force (IAF) has deployed Apache attack helicopters in Ladakh to provide tactical support to the ground forces if needed, besides using the Chinook heavy-weight choppers to help in the movement of men and equipment amid tensions with China.

The increased deployment also includes regular Combat Air Patrols, besides flying a host of surveillance aircraft, including by intelligence agencies and the Navy’s P8I aircraft, defence sources said.

Mirage 2,000 fighter aircraft, which carried out the Balakot air strikes last year, have also been moved to bases near the Ladakh region from Gwalior, Madhya Pradesh, where it is based.

 This has been done to ensure they can fly over in the Ladakh region within minutes of taking off, sources said.

Air Force chief Air Chief Marshal R.K.S. Bhadauria has reportedly made a hush visit to Leh and Srinagar air bases Wednesday evening after high-level meetings with the government.

Following the meetings, the Navy and the IAF had been put on high operational alert.

ThePrint had earlier reported that the Navy has sent out additional ships from its eastern fleet for deployment in the Indian Ocean region.

These developments came even as the Army moved in more ground forces and other assets to Ladakh.

 On 2 June, ThePrint reported the Army moved in about two additional division strength-level forces to the region. Sources said these numbers have now increased further.

While the 14 Corps, the Army division that looks after Ladakh, is sufficiently armed in terms of artillery, armour, men and reserves, more soldiers have been brought in to create large reserves and forward deployment.


Also read: 1954 Panchsheel pact to Galwan Valley ‘violence’ — India-China relations in last 7 decades

‘Assets are there to be used’

The IAF has remained tight-lipped about the movement of its assets.

However, sources said the Apache helicopters have been deployed in Ladakh and that Chinooks are already doing the work they are meant for.

“The assets are there to be used. These are tactical matters. Apache was brought to provide close air support to the ground forces. Chinooks were brought to enable faster deployment of troops and equipment,” a source said.

Also read: China playing victim after attacking Indian soldiers at Galwan. Delhi must not fall for it


India changes rules of engagement at LAC after Galwan Valley clash

According to new rules, Army commanders will have the full freedom to put in use any instrument under his command for tactical operations as deemed fit.

BSF soldiers stand guard at a checkpoint along a highway leading to Ladakh in Kashmir's Ganderbal district on 17 June 2020

SF soldiers stand guard at a checkpoint along a highway leading to Ladakh in Kashmir’s Ganderbal district on 17 June 2020 (representational image) | ANI
New Delhi: The rules of engagement at the Line of Actual Control (LAC), which had put certain restrictions on soldiers, have been changed, and the Chinese have been told about it both at military and diplomatic levels, ThePrint has learnt.

“The rules of engagement have changed. The Army commander on the ground will decide on the tactics to be used to counter any kind of aggression. There is nothing now that binds the commander from taking certain kinds of tactical decisions,” a source told ThePrint.

The decision comes following the clash Monday evening in the Galwan Valley, Ladakh, which claimed the lives of 20 Indian soldiers, including the commanding officer of 16 Bihar battalion, and injuries to several others.

Ten Indian soldiers were also taken hostage by the Chinese, but released Thursday after hectic negotiations at the military and diplomatic levels.

ThePrint on 17 June reported India is likely to review the rules of engagement and Standard Operating Procedures at the LAC in wake of the Galwan incident.


Also read: India learnt the wrong lesson from 1962 China war. Modi govt must be more open


‘India will counter forcefully any violence by China’

Sources said Army commanders will have the full freedom to put in use any instrument under his command for tactical operations as deemed fit.

One of the main questions was the use and carrying of firearms. Sources said, on the ground, the practice was that not all carried loaded firearms while on patrol.

The practice of not opening fire draws its inspiration from the 1996 agreement between India and China, which says “neither side shall open fire or conduct blast operations within 2 km of the Line of Actual Control”.

After the 5 May clash in Pangong lake, soldiers posted there were supplied with light anti-riot gear, including body armours, shields and fibre lathis.

“The Chinese have been told both at diplomatic and military levels that rules of engagement have changed. India will counter forcefully any kind of misstep or violence by China,” another source said.


Also read: To hit China, aim carefully. Don’t shoot yourself in the foot