Protesting the alleged invasion of territory by the Chinese Communist Party and the construction of a Chinese village on the border, the Indian Arunachal People’s Party and people burned the portrait of Chinese Communist leader Xi Jinping (circled in yellow).
Despite the focus on the Epidemic in China and India, the border between the two countries is very unsettled. Not only did a bloody clash between the two armies break out in Sikkim, northeast India, in which at least 20 soldiers of the Communist Party were injured, but four soldiers in India were also wounded, and on the other hand, more than 100 buildings were found to be “growing” in the border state of Arunachal Pradesh.
According to India Today, the latest bloody clash between India and China broke out on the 22nd, when a Communist patrol attempted to cross the border at the Naku La pass in northern Sikkim and was stopped by Indian soldiers.
Another Indian media NDTV reported that according to the satellite cloud map, the area of Arunachal Pradesh, which is located on the Indo-China border, sprouted newly built Communist villages, numbering about 100 or so and arranged quite neatly. These buildings have sprung up in just over a year after there were none in the region in 2019, drawing attention.
Professor Harsh Pant, an expert on international relations in New Delhi, said the area has been under the de facto control of the Beijing authorities since 1959, and that the Chinese Communist Party has been building a large number of buildings in the area, which appear to be civilian structures but are actually for the military, as the area is uninhabited.
Techi Necha, spokesperson for the Arunachal People’s Party, said that the Chinese Communist Party has repeatedly claimed Arunachal Pradesh as their territory and invaded it, when in fact it was the area that was occupied by the Chinese Communist Party in 1959. The party angrily criticized the Chinese Communist Party for illegally building villages in India and the BJP government for not allowing any inch of land to be invaded, and then burned Chinese Communist Party propaganda materials, including an effigy of Xi Jinping.
In response, the Chinese Communist Party claimed that Arunachal Pradesh is part of southern Tibet, while India has always taken the position that the northeastern state is an integral part of the country. Indian media reported that more than 100 buildings have “grown” in the border state of Arunachal Pradesh, which has become a “Chinese village”.
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