China consolidates Rutog base near Pangong Tso to house disengaged PLA troops
China consolidates Rutog base near Pangong Tso to house disengaged PLA troops
Following talks with India, China has consolidated Rutog base near Pangong Tso to house disengaged PLA troops.
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UPDATED: February 23, 2021 13:59 IST
The disengagement process between India and China began on February 10 and has been completed at the Pangong Tso friction point.
The latest satellite imagery has revealed that following the disengagement of the People’s Liberation Army from the Pangong Tso region, some of the troops have been relocated to a military garrison in Rutog County on the eastern end of the lake.
Synopsis
About 150 investment proposals from China worth more than $2 billion were stuck in the pipeline. Companies from Japan and the US routing investment through Hong Kong were also caught in the cross-fire as an inter-ministerial panel led by the home ministry increased scrutiny of such proposals.
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India is set to clear 45 investment proposals from China, which are likely to include those from Great Wall Motor and SAIC Motor Corp, government and industry sources told Reuters, as military tensions between the two countries ease at the disputed border.
The proposals have been held up since last year after India tightened controls on Chinese investment in the country in retaliation against alleged Chinese troop incursions in the western Himalayan region. China blamed Indian troops for the standoff.
India News: China is reported to have arrested three bloggers for questioning the official Chinese version of the Galwan Valley clash on June 15 last year. On Fri
In India s case, China has pursued the objective of forcing its terms through four key fronts — boundary dispute, terrorism, nuclear proliferation, and economic coercion.
India and China have been holding discussions to resolve border standoff since June.
New Delhi:
India and China have concluded the tenth round of military talks, which began yesterday morning after 10 AM and lasted for about 16 hours. The talks come as the two neighbouring countries completed the disengagement process on both the banks of the Pangong Lake in eastern Ladakh on Friday.
In the fresh round of senior commander level talks, disengagement in Depsang, Hot Springs and Gogra remained on the agenda. The discussions were held till 2 AM at Moldo on the Chinese side of the LAC (Line of Actual Control) - the de-facto India-China border - near Chushul on the South Bank of Pangong.