Sanjha Morcha

China blames India for clash at LAC in Ladakh

RAISING ALARM Reports of People’s Liberation Army conducting military drills at an undisclosed location to ‘strike awe in India’ emerge

BEIJING: China on Monday blamed India for the skirmish in Ladakh on August 15 saying Indian troops triggered the scuffle, even as reports about People’s Liberation Army (PLA) conducting military drills to “strike awe in India” have emerged.

AFPHome minister Rajnath Singh greets newly promoted officials of the Indo Tibetan Border Police at an event in New Delhi on Monday.

The foreign ministry said China has lodged “serious concerns” with India over the skirmish that took place near Pangong Lake and along the Line of Actual Control (LAC).

The skirmish between the border troops took place against the backdrop of the military standoff in Doklam area near the Sikkim border.

On August 15, Indian troops stopped Chinese soldiers from crossing the LAC and entering the Indian side . Reports said troops from both sides “pelted” stones at each other before the situation was defused. “According to our information, on August 15, the Chinese border troops conducted a normal patrol on the Chinese side of the LAC around Pangong area,” foreign ministry spokesperson Hua Chunying told a regular news briefing.

“During this process, the Indian side took some violent actions and injured the Chinese border personnel. This has violated the consensus between the Indian and Chinese side in relation to the border issues,” she added. “China has expressed grave dissatisfaction and we have lodged serious concerns to the Indian side.”

India was told “to strictly discipline” the Indian border troops involved in the incident in Ladakh to “earnestly uphold the peace and tranquillity of the boundary area”, she said.

China has already called for the unilateral withdrawal of Indian troops from Doklam area, which is under Beijing’s control but claimed by Bhutan.

China’s official media pointed out that the PLA’s latest drills were held “amid tensions in Doklam” with “trespassing Indian troops”.

The nationalistic Global Times tabloid reported, “The Lianhe Zaobao newspaper on Friday quoted analysts as saying such Chinese PLA military exercises are meant to ‘strike awe in India’ as the two sides have been engaged in a standoff in Doklam for more than two months, and the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau, which is closest to India, is where the Western Theatre Command is most prominent.”

Another official media report said, “China Central Television reported on Friday that more than 10 PLA units, including aviation units and armoured forces, participated in the drills. The five-minute-long video showed tanks firing at targets on hills, followed by helicopters firing missiles at ground targets.”

It added, “The report did not mention the location of the exercises, only saying the drills ‘lay the ground for plateau warfare’.”

The drills were conducted by PLA’s Western Theatre Command that covers Tibet, Xinjiang, Ningxia, Qinghai, Sichuan and Chongqing.