Amid Dokalam standoff, Chinese transgression in Uttarakhand's Barahoti on July 25
India | July 31, 2017 18:43 ISTChinese troops are reported to have transgressed into Indian territory in Uttarakhand last week.
Chinese troops are reported to have transgressed into Indian territory in Uttarakhand last week.
China on Thursday reiterated that it won't talk to India until New Delhi withdraws troops from Doklam where both armies have been locked in a stand-off for more than a month
External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj today said that while China is trying to change the status quo in the Doklam tri-junction area, India is well equipped to defend itself and doesn’t feel threatened in the least
The US has expressed concern over the ongoing standoff between Indian and Chinese troops in the Sikkim sector and said the two countries should work together to come up with "some sort of arrangement" for peace
The government on Tuesday said that China has been unusually aggressive and vocal on the ongoing Doklam dispute, but the two sides are trying to find a solution through diplomatic solutions
Beijing’s state media on Tuesday said that India should get ready for an “all-out confrontation” along the entire stretch of the disputed boundary with China, threatening to open up new fronts of conflict
China has told the foreign diplomats in Beijing that troops of the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) have been waiting patiently at the plateau, but will not wait for an indefinite period
Notably, PLA’s Tibet Military Command, which conducted the drills, guards the Line of Actual Control (LAC) of the India-China border along several sections connecting the mountainous Tibetan region
This is the first time China has clearly articulated – through one of its primary official channels – that there is no room for parleys to resolve the month-long impasse in Donglang, which is under China’s control but claimed by Bhutan
A day after Foreign Secretary S Jaishankar said that India and China could resolve the border issues over Doklam as they had handled similar issues in the past, Beijing rebuffed the move saying the situation was “entirely different” this time
India and China have handled border issues in the past and there is no reason the two countries will not be able to handle them this time, Foreign Secretary S Jaishankar said in Singapore on Tuesday
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