Soldiers injured in fresh border skirmish between India and China

By Joanna Slater,

Diptendu Dutta AFP/Getty Images

A Chinese soldier gestures in July 2008 as he stands near an Indian soldier on the Chinese side of the ancient Nathu La border crossing between India and China.

NEW DELHI — Indian and Chinese troops clashed at their disputed border last week with minor injuries on both sides, Indian officials said, underscoring the persistent tensions between the two nuclear-armed neighbors.

India and China share an unofficial frontier that stretches 2,200 miles. Last June, the deadliest border conflict between the two countries in five decades killed 20 Indian soldiers and caused an unknown number of Chinese casualties.

Since then, tens of thousands of Indian and Chinese troops have been locked in a stalemate near the site of the clash in Ladakh. Soldiers are enduring brutal winter temperatures high in the mountains as talks have failed to make progress.

The latest incident took place hundreds of miles from that standoff at a different section of the frontier in the eastern Himalayas.

[What are India and China fighting over?]

Indian and Chinese soldiers engaged in a “minor faceoff” on Jan. 20 in the Naku La area of the state of Sikkim, the Indian Army said in a statement. The situation was “resolved by local commanders as per established protocols.”

Minor injuries were suffered on both sides, said an Indian official with knowledge of the incident who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss the matter.

A second Indian official who also spoke on the condition of anonymity characterized the clash as “hand-to-hand combat.”

Indian media reports suggested that more than 20 Chinese and Indian soldiers were injured in the scuffle. The Indian Army statement did not mention injuries and asked the media to refrain from “exaggerating or overplaying” their reporting.

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian said he didn’t have any information to offer on the incident and urged India to exercise restraint, Reuters reported.

India should “refrain from actions that might escalate or complicate the situation along the border,” Zhao told reporters at a briefing.

Hu Xijin, editor of the Chinese state-run tabloid Global Times, dismissed the reports of multiple injuries. “This is fake news,” he wrote on Twitter. “Based on what I learned, there is no record of this clash in the patrol log of the Chinese side.”

The current frictions began in May, when China intruded into areas claimed by India at several points along the frontier, experts say. They believe that China may now control as much as 400 square miles of territory that India considers its own.

Last week’s altercation came as India and China were preparing to meet for their ninth round of talks to resolve the standoff at the border, which is known as the Line of Actual Control.

There have been no further deadly clashes at the frontier since June, but the situation remains tense. In September, shots were fired in Ladakh for the first time in decades. By mutual agreement, Indian and Chinese soldiers have been restricted from using firearms along the border.

After fighting a war in 1962, India and China mostly resolved their border differences through dialogue. The current impasse, however, is showing no signs of improvement. Shyam Saran, a former high-ranking Indian diplomat, said the fact that talks were still taking place was “a reason to hope” that an understanding will be reached through negotiation.

Saurav Jha, a defense analyst in Delhi, was less sanguine. “Tensions are quite high,” said Jha. “When you have large forces in close proximity and there is no resolution after rounds and rounds of talks, then the probability of something happening cannot be considered insignificant.”


Taniya Dutta in Delhi and Eva Dou in Seoul contributed to this report.

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Source: WP