India warns China over border ‘security’ threat

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  • China says its determination to uphold territorial integrity, sovereignty unwavering

India condemned a new road that China is building on the Himalayan border on Friday, saying it raises serious ‘security’ concerns.

The two sides are trading increasingly stern diplomatic warnings over the new hotspot, a remote scrap of territory where the frontiers of China, India and Bhutan meet. This week, Beijing made a formal protest, accusing Indian border guards of crossing from the northeastern state of Sikkim into its Tibetan territory to stop the road building.

On Friday, India’s External Affairs Ministry said that China’s People’s Liberation Army (PLA) troops entered the area to ‘unilaterally’ construct the road. “India is deeply concerned at the recent Chinese actions and has conveyed to the Chinese government that such construction would represent a significant change of status quo with serious ‘security’ implications for India,” a ministry statement said.

“India cherishes ‘peace and tranquility’ in the India-China border areas. It has not come easily,” it said, urging Beijing to resolve the skirmish through dialogue. China and India have long disputed parts of their Himalayan border, and regularly accuse each other of making encroachments through troops.

Bhutan has also lodged a formal protest to China, saying the road violated a bilateral agreement. Bhutan, which does not have diplomatic relations with China, still disputes sovereignty of the land. And the showdown is part of a wider friction between China and India over the 4,057 kilometres border. China has insisted several times this week that India withdraw troops who are trespassing on its side of the frontier.

It insists that it has every right to build the road and that it controls the territory under an 1890 accord made with Britain when it was colonial power in the region. “We can tell you that the Chinese people hold a friendly and goodwill relations to the Bhutan people but our determination to uphold our territorial integrity and sovereignty is unwavering,” a Chinese Foreign Affairs Ministry spokesman Lu Kang said on Friday.

“The nature of this standoff is quite clear, it’s a trespass by the Indian side to the Chinese border. So the obvious thing is their withdrawal from the Chinese side.” India and China’s ties have been dogged by mistrust stemming from a brief war in 1962 over the northeastern state of Arunachal Pradesh which has a large ethnic Tibetan population.

Flare-ups around Sikkim are rare. It is the least populous and second smallest of India’s states, but its location gives it strategic importance. India’s seven remote northeastern states are connected to the rest of the country by a narrow sliver of land known as the chicken’s neck. Sikkim is wedged between Nepal, Bhutan and China.

“The Chinese have realised that India is vulnerable at the ‘chicken neck’ so it could be a way to test the reaction of the Indian establishment,” said Sameer Patil, an Indian defence and security analyst at the Mumbai-based Gateway House think-tank. Tensions along the frontier rose in 2014 when Chinese soldiers moved into territory on the Sikkim-Tibet border claimed by India, sparking a two-week stand-off.

Hundreds of Indian and Chinese troops faced off on the de facto border, overshadowing a visit by China’s President Xi Jinping. The latest border scuffle was triggered after PLA soldiers damaged two Indian bunkers, according to the Indian media. China has reportedly since stopped pilgrims crossing into Tibet to visit a mountain shrine to the revered Hindu god Shiva because of the showdown.