India and China accused each other today of making provocative military moves and firing warning shots along their disputed border despite talks to end the escalating tensions.
China said Indian forces Monday crossed into territory it holds along their disputed border and fired warning shots at a Chinese patrol in what it called a violation of their agreements. India denied that and said the Chinese soldiers tried to surround one of their forward posts in a "grave provocation'' and also fired few warning shots.
The nuclear-armed rivals have been engaged in a tense standoff in the cold-desert Ladakh region since May, and their defense ministers met Friday in Moscow in the first high-level direct contact between the sides since the standoff began.
China's western military command said the incursion occurred Monday along the southern coast of Pangong Lake in the area known in Chinese as Shenpaoshan. On the Indian side, the area is known as Chushul where the two countries local military commanders have held several rounds of talks to defuse the tense standoff.
After shots were fired, Chinese forces took "necessary measures to stabilize and control the situation,'' the command said, in the statement citing spokesman Zhang Shuili. It demanded the Indian forces withdraw and investigate the move to open fire.
Col. Aman Anand, an Indian army spokesman, said China continues "provocative activities to escalate'' tensions along the front line and called the China's military statement an attempt to mislead domestic and international audiences.
Anand said the Chinese soldiers had tried to surround an Indian military post and fired a few shots in the air when the Indian soldiers ``dissuaded'' them. He said Indian troops ``exercised great restraint.''
He accused China's military for ``blatantly violating agreements and carrying out aggressive maneuvers while engagement at military, diplomatic and political level is in progress.''
There was no word of casualties on either side.
Late last month, India says its soldiers thwarted the Chinese military's moves ``to change the status quo'' in violation of a consensus reached in past efforts to settle the standoff. In turn, China also accused Indian troops of crossing established lines of control.
The activity last month and on Monday were alleged to have occurred on the southern bank of Pangong Lake, a glacial lake divided by the de facto frontier and where the India-China faceoff began on its northern flank in early May.
The standoff escalated to a medieval, nighttime clash June 15 that was the deadliest conflict in 45 years between the nuclear-armed rivals. According to Indian officials, Chinese troops atop a ridge at the mouth of the narrow Galwan Valley threw stones, punched and pushed Indian soldiers down the ridge at around 4,500 meters (15,000 feet). India said 20 of its soldiers were killed, including a colonel. China did not report any casualties.
The disputed and undemarcated 3,500-kilometer (2,175-mile) border between India and China, referred to as the Line of Actual Control, stretches from the Ladakh region in the north to the Indian state of Arunachal Pradesh. According to China, the frontier is about 2,000 kilometers (1240-mile) and claims entire Arunachal Pradesh as its territory.