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Chinese PLA Choppers Spotted Near LAC; IAF Rushes Fighter Jets To Ladakh Border: Report

Swarajya StaffMay 12, 2020, 02:22 PM | Updated 02:22 PM IST
A Mirage 2000 fighter jet. (Dassault Aviation)

A Mirage 2000 fighter jet. (Dassault Aviation)


After the face-off between the Indian troops and the Chinese troops last week along the Line of Actual Control (LAC) near Sikkim’s Naku La pass, China seems to be planning something on the Ladakh border.

The Indian Air Force (IAF) had to rush its fighter jets to patrol along the LAC in Ladakh after helicopters of the Chinese People’s Liberation Army (PLA) were seen to be doing rounds near the border. This incident too occurred last week, as the report suggests, around the same time when the scuffle took place between the two troops in North Sikkim.

“The Chinese military helicopters were flying very close to the Line of Actual Control. After their movement was picked up, the Indian Air Force fighter jets flew patrols in the area,” government sources told ANI in New Delhi.

However, the IAF officials called it a “routine affair”.

“China military choppers fly in their territories and our fighter jets in our territories. It is normal routine affair,” said an IAF officer, as quoted by IANS. He also rejected the aggressive approach at LAC.

The officer said, “On Tuesday also the Chinese military helicopters were flying close to LAC and our planes were also doing routine sortie.” When asked about the aggressive attitude, the officer speaking candidly said, “It is being unnecessarily sensationalised. It is a routine Standard Operating Procedure"

The act of China flying military choppers near LAC is being perceived as a provocation by the Indian military establishment.

The LAC, unlike international borders, is not clearly marked. The India-China border dispute covers the 3,488-km-long LAC.

The Indian and Chinese soldiers were involved in scuffles at two occasions in last one week along Line of Actual Control in north Sikkim and Ladakh.

Sources said that four Indian soldiers and half a dozen of Chinese counterparts were injured during the confrontation in North Sikkim.


Later, the confrontation was resolved at the local level.

Sources said that temporary and short duration face offs occur as boundary issues are not resolved.

"Incidents of face off took place. Aggressive behaviour and minor injuries took place from both sides. They were disengaged after dialogue and interaction at local level,” a source was quoted by IANS.

Troops resolve such issues mutually as per established protocols.

The scuffle in Ladakh took place on 5 May night and was resolved by 6 May morning.

This is not the first time Indian and Chinese soldiers have exchanged blows along the border.

Back in August 2017, Indian and Chinese soldiers threw stones at each other and exchanged blows near Pangong Lake in Ladakh. The clash had aggravated tensions between the two countries as it happened at a time when they were locked in a stand-off in the territory of Doklam in Sikkim.

It took two months to end the stand-off between the forces.

(With inputs from IANS)

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