BEIJING — China laid the blame at India’s door on Monday for an altercation along their border in the western Himalayas involving soldiers from both of the Asian giants.
Both countries’ troops have been embroiled in an eight-week-long stand-off on the Doklam plateau in another part of the remote Himalayan region near their disputed frontier.
Meanwhile, India’s home minister said on Monday he believed a border stand-off with China would end soon, after new footage emerged showing border guards from both countries fighting on a disputed patch of land in the Himalayas.
Indian and Chinese soldiers have for more than two months been facing off on a disputed tract of land known as Doklam that India says is Bhutanese territory and China claims for itself.
Some analysts have said the dispute amounts to the worst crisis in relations between the two nuclear-armed neighbors in decades.
On Monday, Home Minister Rajnath Singh said India wanted peaceful relations with its neighbors as he addressed a unit of border guards in the capital Delhi.
“A deadlock is going on between India and China in Doklam. But I think a solution will come out soon. China will also take a positive step from its side,” Singh said as he addressed the paramilitary Indo-Tibetan Border Police (ITBP).
“We want to maintain good relations with our neighbors. We don’t want conflict, we want peace.”
India’s Foreign Ministry has confirmed the incident in Ladakh took place but has not given any details.
India and China share a long history of mistrust and went to war in 1962 over the Indian state of Arunachal Pradesh.
The latest stand-off began in mid-June after Chinese troops started building a road on a remote plateau that is claimed by both China and Bhutan.
India has an army base nearby and moved soldiers into the flashpoint zone to halt the work, prompting Beijing to accuse it of trespassing on Chinese soil.
China has said India must withdraw its troops before any proper negotiation takes place. India said both sides should withdraw their forces together.
India has historically been closely allied to Bhutan, but in recent years China has sought to increase its engagement with the tiny mountainous kingdom.
That has fed into a broader competition for regional influence between the two Asian powers. — Agencies