Rare gunfire stirs China-India border blame game
China and India accused each other of firing shots
first across a flashpoint Himalayan border, intensifying a months-long standoff
between the nuclear-armed neighbours that has already claimed at least 20
lives.
China said Tuesday its soldiers took
"countermeasures" after Indian soldiers opened fire in a contested
mountainous region in Ladakh.
India was guilty of a "severe military
provocation" on Monday after its soldiers crossed the Line of Actual
Control in the western border region of Ladakh and "opened fire",
according to China's Defence Ministry.
New Delhi was swift to give its own account,
accusing Chinese border forces of "blatantly violating agreements"
and firing "a few rounds in the air" to intimidate their Indian
rivals.
"Despite the grave provocation, (our) own
troops exercised great restraint and behaved in a mature and responsible
manner," the Indian army said in a statement.
It is first confirmed shooting across the contested
frontier for decades, where skittish border forces by convention do not use
guns to avoid escalations of violence in remote terrain.
The relationship between the neighbours has plunged
following a June clash in the contested region in which 20 Indian troops were
killed.
A spokesperson for the Chinese People's Liberation
Army (PLA) gave no specifics on the apparent retaliation and gave no report of
casualties, calling on India to probe the incident.
Tens of thousands of troops from both sides have
been deployed to the disputed Himalayan border, which sits at an altitude of
more than 4,000 metres (13,500 feet).
The countries fought a brief border war in 1962, but
officially no shots have been fired in the area since 1975 when four Indian
troops were killed in an ambush.
Because the frontier has never been properly
demarcated and the high-altitude terrain is often disorientating, the practice
for decades was for neither side to use weapons.
Detailed protocols set out procedures for peaceful
disengagement if patrols strayed into areas that the other side believed were
their territory.
But a serious clash in the Ladakh region on June 15
-- fought with fists and mediaeval-style weapons such as clubs studded with
nails -- left 20 Indian troops dead.
China has also acknowledged suffering casualties but
haven't revealed any figures.
Since then, reinforcements have ranged on either
side of the border.
India's military has also reportedly changed its
rules of engagement, allowing troops to carry guns.
Defence ministers from both countries met in Moscow
last week but statements released later suggest reconciliation remains distant.
Earlier this week an Indian minister said Delhi had
alerted China to allegations five men had been abducted by the People's
Liberation Army close to the disputed border.



