India-China Clash Again At Lac, ‘Warning Shots’ Fired

07 Sep 2020

Indian government sources confirmed that shots were fired along the LAC in eastern Ladakh, adding that the situation has no been brought under control.

Shots were fired along the Line of Actual Control (LAC) in eastern Ladakh where Indian and Chinese troops are engaged in a military standoff, a source in the government confirmed while adding that the situation has now been brought under control.

The clarification comes after the Chinese Ministry of Defence put out a statement saying that there was an instance where shots were fired in presence of the Indian Army and the People’s Liberation Army (PLA). “The Indian army again illegally crossed the Line of Actual Control in Shenpao mountain near the south bank of Pangong Tso Lake on Monday,” PLA Western Theater Command spokesperson Colonel Zhang Shuili claimed.

Referring to the said incident, a source in the Indian Army said “warning shots” were fired after Chinese soldiers fired at Indian positions and there was a limited exchange. Troops on the border have been on high alert ever since they took control of Kaala top and Helmet top, the source said adding, Chinese troops have been making advances to regain control of the two strategic peaks overlooking PLA camps.

A visual from two days ago shows the buildup of the Indian Army atop the Shepao Mountain on the southern side of Pangong Tso. This is the same area where the Indian Army fired ‘warning shots’ after spotting Chinese troops heading towards the mountain top from their side of the LAC in darkness.

Indian troops atop Shepao Mountain

This incident from Monday was not the first time shots were fired during the ongoing standoff, a source said. On August 31, there was a brief exchange of ‘warning shots’ when Chinese troops attempted to approach and evict Indian soldiers from strategic heights in south Pangong. It has been clarified that these too were merely ‘warning shots’ and not offensive exchange of gunfire.

On the other hand, Chinese Western Theater Commander, Colonel Zhang Shuili said, “During the operation, Indian Army blatantly fired threats to the patrol personnel of the Chinese border guards who had made representations, and the Chinese border guards were forced to take countermeasures to stabilize the situation on the ground.”

Colonel Shuili asked the Indian side to refrain from such “provocative actions”, requesting India to probe those who fired the shots. He further added, “They are serious military provocations and are of very bad nature. We request the Indian side to immediately stop dangerous actions, immediately withdraw cross-line personnel, strictly restrain front-line troops, and strictly investigate and punish personnel who fired shots to ensure that similar incidents do not occur again.”

“Western Theater troops will resolutely perform their duties and missions and resolutely defend national territorial sovereignty,” Colonel Shuili told reporters.

This is the first recorded instance of firing on the India-China border since 1975. The situation at the LAC is intensifying despite multiple rounds of military and diplomatic dialogue.

Defence Minister Rajnath Singh met his Chinese counterpart Wei Fenghe in Moscow on the sidelines of the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) meet to discuss the issue.

On Sunday, a Brigadier Commander-level meet between India and China held near Chushul lasted for nearly four hours but yielded no tangible result.

China has repeatedly blamed India for the escalations and even the violent Galwan Valley clash where 20 Indian soldiers lost their lives and the PLA incurred an unknown number of casualties.

This escalation comes days before External Affairs Minister Dr S Jaishankar is to visit Moscow for the SCO meet and will be holding bilateral talks with his Chinese counterpart Wang Yi.

During an interaction on Monday, Jaishankar said he will tell Wang Yi, “The state of the border cannot be de-linked from the state of the relationship. We have a number of understandings on border management that go back to 1993. If peace and tranquility at the border are not a given then the rest of the relationship cannot be on an upward trajectory. Peace and tranquility is the basis for the relationship.”

Courtesy: Opera News/ indiatoday.in