India confirms 3 soldiers killed in clash with China in Himalayas
NEW DELHI — An Indian Army officer and two soldiers have been killed in a clash with Chinese troops on the countries’ disputed Himalayan border, where the two sides have been locked in a tense standoff for more than a month.
The Indian Army on Tuesday released a statement saying the “violent face-off” took place Monday night in the Galwan Valley in the Himalayan region of Ladakh, with casualties on both sides. “Senior military officials of the two sides are currently meeting at the venue to defuse the situation,” the statement added.
Local TV reports said no shots were fired and that the casualties appear to have been the result of hand-to-hand fighting. No details of the possible Chinese casualties have been released.
The Global Times newspaper, a Chinese Communist Party mouthpiece, quoted a Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman as saying that Indian troops had committed a serious violation by illegally crossing the border twice on Monday. The spokesman accused the Indian forces of carrying out provocative attacks, resulting in “serious physical clashes.”
“China has lodged solemn representations with the Indian side and urged it to strictly restrain its front-line troops from crossing the border or taking any unilateral action that may complicate the border situation,” the paper quoted spokesman Zhao Lijian as saying. It added that the two sides had agreed to resolve bilateral issues through dialogue to ease tensions on the border.
The standoff between the nuclear-armed neighbors began in early May, when Indian and Chinese soldiers confronted each other at Pangong Tso, a lake over 4,000 meters above sea level in Ladakh — along the border known as the Line of Actual Control, or LAC. Indian media reported at one point that over 1,000 Chinese soldiers had crossed into India’s territory, but Monday’s incident marks a dangerous escalation.
In the background is an Indian move to lay a road in the region, as part of its efforts to improve infrastructure along the border. This drew sharp objections from China.
The 3,500 km India-China border has long been prone to flare-ups, including a war in 1962. The last serious standoff took place in 2017, at a strategic junction on the Doklam plateau where the boundaries of India, China and Bhutan meet. The Doklam tensions lasted 73 days, the longest such confrontation in decades.
