Indian Army chief plays down Chinese incursion
January 10th, 2011 - 7:59 pm ICT by IANSNew Delhi, Jan 10 (IANS) Indian Army chief General V.K. Singh Monday played down reports of a Chinese incursion in Jammu and Kashmir’s frontier area of Ladakh saying it was due the perceptional differences of the Line of Actual Control (LAC) - the de facto border between the two countries.”There is a perceptional differences about the Line of Actual Control between us and China. Obviously somebody (with a) perception that the border passes through a particular area is going to come and stop, like we would do if it was our perception,” Singh said on the sidelines of the function here.
His remarks come amid reports of a fresh Chinese incursion in Demchok in Ladakh as Chinese soldiers in October last year also threatened local construction workers and stopped them from building a bus station in an area close the LAC.
But the army chief said the incident was not “alarming”.
“I only see it as a problem of perception. We patrol up to our perception of the LAC which is further east and the Chinese come to the LAC as perceived by them,” he said.
“When they do that and it is beyond our line, it is called transgression. I am quite sure on the Chinese side also they would call it a transgression when our patrols go up to our line of perception.”
The army chief said the area where construction was going on was out of bounds for any construction work and regretted that “unfortunately” such activities were being pushed for local gains.
“Unfortunately, some people for various local gains have pushed construction activity in that area,” he said.
Singh was speaking to reporters on the sidelines of his interaction with NCC cadets on a Republic Day camp.
Addressing the cadets he recalled the days when he was himself a naval cadet during his school days.
He acknowledged the “valuable contribution” of NCC and said it “grooms leaders on and off the field, infusing positive attitude and team spirit through a cutting edge provided by multifarious training to young cadets”.
He exhorted the young cadets to emulate the former outstanding cadets who did the country proud at national and international levels.
A select group of cadets presented a Guard Of Honour to the chief which was followed by a spectacular band display.
Some 1,950 cadets - both boys and girls from 17 NCC directorates from all over the country - are participating in the Republic Day camp. The cadets will take part in a number of activities like cultural, national integration awareness and institutional training competitions during the month long Republic Day Camp.
- Reports of Chinese incursion in Ladakh baseless: MEA (Lead) - Jan 10, 2011
- Reports of alleged Chinese intrusion in Demchok baseless: Govt. - Jan 10, 2011
- Resolve China boundary row for development: Kashmir minister - Jan 14, 2011
- Army chief plays down Chinese troop incursion in Ladakh - Jan 10, 2011
- India admits to unpleasant 'situations' along China border - Nov 30, 2011
- China denies Indian border incursion - Jan 11, 2011
- Chinese 'transgressions' continue, says army commander - May 11, 2010
- China betrayed friendship, says Farooq on reported Chinese incursion - Jan 10, 2011
- NCC cadet commended for efforts during Leh cloudburst - Jan 20, 2011
- No Chinese pressure: Omar - Jul 01, 2011
- NCC readies for Republic Day parade - Jan 05, 2011
- India's border projects progressing unhindered: Antony - Nov 28, 2011
- India protested Chinese troops damaging wall in Tawang: Antony - Dec 21, 2011
- Chinese objections to Ladakh road due to differing perceptions: India - Dec 05, 2009
- Pallam Raju inaugurates NCC DDGs' conference - Apr 27, 2011
Tags: actual control, army chief, bus station, chief general, chinese side, chinese soldiers, construction activity, frontier area, grooms, incursion, indian army, jammu and kashmir, ladakh, local construction, naval cadet, positive attitude, republic day, sidelines, team spirit, transgression