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MEA: Since May, troops amassing

A month on, foreign ministry sings like a canary

Narendra Modi at the all-party meeting on June 19. (PIB/PTI)

Anita Joshua
New Delhi | Published 26.06.20, 04:52 AM

The Narendra Modi government on Thursday admitted for the first time that the situation along the Line of Actual Control (LAC) was much more serious than the routine clashes that take place between Indian and Chinese patrol teams.

The ministry of external affairs (MEA) said after two months of silence and confusing signals that both sides had amassed troops in the area.

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Highlights of what external affairs ministry spokesperson Anurag Srivastava said in response to questions at a weekly briefing:

Till now, particularly before the hand-to-hand combat at the Galwan Valley in Ladakh on June 15 that left 20 Indian soldiers dead and reportedly caused casualties on the Chinese side too, the Indian Army and the external affairs ministry had been maintaining that the face-offs at different points of the LAC, which is not clearly demarcated, were routine.)

While giving by far the most detailed statement on the escalation, the spokesperson did not respond to the question whether India was better informed now after several rounds of meetings at the military and diplomatic level, and why China had chosen to ratchet up tensions at this juncture.

Other key questions that Srivastava sidestepped included those on the plan for de-escalation and whether it had begun, whether there has been any contact between the foreign secretaries of the two countries and their special representatives — in India’s case national security adviser Ajit Doval — and whether the Chinese had also made an ingress into the Depsang Plains, which had seen an intrusion in 2013.

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