Advertisement
Advertisement
China-India border dispute
Get more with myNEWS
A personalised news feed of stories that matter to you
Learn more
An Indian tourist rides a horse at the Pangong lake in the Ladakh region of India. Chinese soldiers hurled stones while attempting to enter the region on Tuesday but were confronted by Indian soldiers, a top police officer said, adding that neither side used guns. Photo: AP

China assails India over reported road project in disputed territory amid rising border tension

India’s newly approved road project reportedly will run through the disputed Ladakh region close to Pangong Lake

China slammed India on Thursday over a report that it plans to build a road in territory disputed between the two countries, after weeks of tension elsewhere along the border.

India’s newly approved road project will run through the disputed Ladakh region close to Pangong Lake, the country’s Hindustan Times reported Tuesday.

A separate Chinese attempt to build a road in the Doklam area – which is disputed between China and Bhutan – has prompted a stand-off between hundreds of Indian and Chinese soldiers which has lasted for more than two months.

Photo: SCMP

“The Indian side is closely following China’s road building recently, but the Indians’ actions themselves have proven that the Indian side says one thing and does another,” Chinese foreign ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying told a regular briefing.

She said the reported decision to build a road in Ladakh is “in complete contradiction to its deeds in terms of the border issues”.

“The current road construction in that area by the Indian side is not conducive to peace and stability in that area.”

A video surfaced last week of a brawl between Chinese and Indian soldiers near the Ladakh area, which is over 4,000 metres above sea level on the Tibetan plateau and is a popular tourist attraction.

China and India have a number of border disputes and went to war in 1962 over the Indian state of Arunachal Pradesh.

In 2014 hundreds of Indian and Chinese troops faced off across the de facto border known as the Line of Actual Control that runs along the northwest Indian region of Ladakh.

The latest stand-off began in mid-June after Chinese troops started building a road on Doklam plateau.

Pangong lake is shown as seen from India, high up in the Ladahak region. Photo: AP

India has an army base nearby and moved soldiers into the flashpoint zone to halt the work, prompting Beijing to accuse it of trespassing on Chinese soil.

China has repeatedly said India must withdraw its troops before any proper negotiation on the dispute takes place. India said the two sides should withdraw their forces simultaneously.

Post