TC Bureau New
Delhi: China has deployed five militia squads for rapid
response at the disputed Line of Actual Control in Eastern Ladakh. It has done
so to “consolidate the border” and “stabilise Tibet region”, sources said.
“Militia is basically a reserve force of the Chinese’s People
Liberation Army. They are deployed during war time situations and help the PLA
in its military operations,” said a senior government officer.
The officer also explained that Chinese militia
conducts independent operations and provides combat support and manpower to
replenish the PLA. “It is an irregular mix of mountaineers, boxers, members of
local fight clubs and others. Most of the members are raised from the local
population,” said the officer.
It was after their deployments across the LAC that China
started making incursion attempts into Indian territories.
China had made provocative military movements to change the
status quo at Pangong Tso. However, Indian soldiers were already present at
those heights to thwart the PLA’s land-grabbing bid.
On the intervening night of August 29 and August
30, 2020, PLA troops had violated the previous consensus agreed in military and
diplomatic engagements during the ongoing standoff in eastern Ladakh and
carried out provocative military movements to change the status quo.
“Indian troops pre-empted this PLA activity on the Southern
Bank of Pangong Tso, and undertook measures to strengthen our positions and thwart
Chinese intentions to unilaterally change facts on ground,” the force said.
The Indian Army also stated that they are
committed to maintaining peace and tranquillity through dialogue, but are also
equally determined to protect its territorial integrity.
North of the Pangong Tso, China has refused to move back from
its present military position. China has strengthened their positions between
Finger-5 and 8 of the Pangong Lake. The PLA has refused to pull back eastwards
from the 8-km stretch it has occupied from Finger-4 to Finger-8 by building
scores of new fortifications there since early May. The mountain spurs jutting
into the lake are referred to as Fingers in military parlance.
India has asked China to completely withdraw
troops from Pangong Tso.
Both the countries have been engaged in the standoff since
May. Despite several levels of dialogue, there has not been any breakthrough.
India has also found that the Chinese side has started troop,
artillery and armour build-up in three sectors of the LAC — western (Ladakh),
middle (Uttarakhand, Himachal Pradesh) and eastern (Sikkim, Arunachal Pradesh).
On June 15, twenty Indian soldiers and an unknown number of
Chinese troops were killed in a violent clash at the Galwan valley.


















