China objects to Ladakh status, Indian border activities
China on Tuesday called India’s designation of the
region along their disputed border as a federal territory an illegal move, and
voiced new objections to infrastructure construction that seems to strengthen
India’s position in the area.
Foreign ministry spokesperson Wang Wenbin also said
reports of new Chinese military bases and other facilities being built on its
side were “totally untrue and have ulterior motives.”
Senior commanders agreed earlier this month not to
add more troops along their fast-militarizing disputed border in the
mountainous Ladakh region, but appear to have made no progress in disengaging
their forces from the ongoing standoff as they had earlier pledged to do.
It wasn't clear on what basis China rejected India's
move last year to reconstitute Ladakh as a federal territory separate from
Jammu and Kashmir, or why it considered that illegal. It was likely due to the
ongoing conflict over the Line of Actual Control that runs through part of the
high desert territory.
“China does not recognize the so-called Ladakh
central government region illegally established by India," Wang told
reporters at a daily briefing, saying any new construction violated a pledge by
the leaders of both sides. “We are also opposed to infrastructure construction
aimed at military acquisition and control in the disputed border areas."
Wang said China’s border defense forces operate on
their side of the Line of Actual Control, or LAC, and “strictly abide by the
relevant agreements." China “is committed to maintaining peace and
stability in the border areas between China and India, and firmly upholds
national territorial sovereignty and security," he said.
Wang did not address reports that China is
increasing the building of roads and other infrastructure along its side of the
border.
In New Delhi, the Ministry of External Affairs said
in a statement that it hopes that China will “sincerely and faithfully” abide
by all agreements between the two countries and “refrain from advancing an
untenable unilateral interpretation of the LAC.”
The standoff in Ladakh began in May and escalated in
June to the deadliest violence between the two sides in decades — a clash on a
high ridge in which soldiers used clubs, stones and their fists. Twenty Indian
soldiers were killed and dozens of others were injured. China is believed to
have also suffered casualties but has not provided any details.
The two countries have amassed tens of thousands of
soldiers, backed by artillery, tanks and fighter jets, in the Ladakh area since
the deadly standoff.
After that clash, the two countries partially
disengaged from the site in Ladakh’s Galwan Valley and at least two other
places, but the crisis has continued in at least three other areas, including
the glacial Pangong Lake.
In recent weeks, the world’s two most populous
nations have accused each other of sending soldiers into each other’s territory
in the Pangong area and firing warning shots for the first time in 45 years,
raising the specter of a full-scale military conflict.
Relations between the two countries have often been
strained, partly due to their undemarcated border. They fought a border war in
1962 that spilled into Ladakh and ended in an uneasy truce. Since then, troops
have guarded the undefined border while occasionally brawling. The two
countries have agreed not to attack each other with firearms.
The fiercely contested control line separates
Chinese- and Indian-held territories from Ladakh in the west to India’s eastern
state of Arunachal Pradesh, which China claims in its entirety. It is broken in
parts where the Himalayan nations of Nepal and Bhutan border China.
According to India, the de facto border is 3,488
kilometers (2,167 miles) long, while China says it is considerably shorter. As
its name suggests, it divides the areas of physical control rather than
territorial claims.



