India accuses China of new 'provocative' border action

The Indian military on Monday accused China of
carrying out "provocative" movements on their contested Himalayan
border near where 20 Indian troops were killed in a battle in June.
A defence ministry statement said the incidents
happened in eastern Ladakh on Saturday night but did not indicate whether there
was a new clash.
Chinese People's Liberation Army troops
"carried out provocative military movements to change the status quo"
at the border, it said.
It added the two sides were holding military talks
on Monday.
On June 15, troops from the two sides fought
hand-to-hand combat in which 20 Indian troops were killed. China also
acknowledged casualties but did not give numbers.
New Delhi and Beijing have blamed each other for the
latest frontier tensions between the two sides who fought a border war in 1962
and have been involved in regular showdowns since.
The Chinese and Indian militaries have poured tens
of thousands of troops into the region since the June fighting. But their
military and diplomatic talks on easing tensions are in an apparent stalemate.
The Indian statement said Chinese troops
"violated the consensus" to ease border tensions.
"Indian troops pre-empted this PLA activity on
the southern bank of Pangong Tso Lake, undertook measures to strengthen our
positions and thwart Chinese intentions to unilaterally change facts on
ground," said the ministry.
"A brigade commander level flag meeting is in
progress at Chushul to resolve the issues."