Taking the high road: India infrastructure drive counters China

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Indian army soldiers at a war memorial in the Tawang district of India's Arunachal Pradesh state. (AFP)
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This picture taken on April 2, 2023 shows tunnel under construction at Sela pass in the Tawang district of India's Arunachal Pradesh state. (Arun Sankar/AFP)
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Bikers ride past the still under-construction Nechiphu tunnel in West Kameng district of India's Arunachal Pradesh state on April 2, 2023. (AFP)
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A view of the Gorsam stupa near Lumpo village in Zemithang, in the Tawang district of India's Arunachal Pradesh state. (AFP)
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An Indian border post near the frontier with China in Khinzemane, in India's Arunachal Pradesh state. (AFP)
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Indian army soldiers performing a ceremony at the Jaswant Garh war memorial in the Tawang district of India's Arunachal Pradesh state on April 5, 2023. (AFP)
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Indian army soldiers performing a ceremony at the Jaswant Garh war memorial in the Tawang district of India's Arunachal Pradesh state on April 5, 2023. (AFP)
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Updated 05 May 2023
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Taking the high road: India infrastructure drive counters China

ZEMITHANG, India: Freshly laid roads, bridges, upgraded military camps, and new civilian infrastructure dot the winding high Himalayan route to the Indian frontier village of Zemithang — which China renamed last month to press its claim to the area.
It is in the far northeastern Indian state of Arunachal Pradesh, almost all of which Beijing insists falls under its sovereignty as “South Tibet.”
The Asian giants fought a war in 1962 over their 3,500-kilometer (2,200-mile) divide, now known as the Line of Actual Control, and it remains disputed to this day, with sporadic clashes and regular diplomatic maneuvers.

Culturally largely Tibetan, Arunachal Pradesh is savage territory for battle, with mountain passes as high as 4,750 meters (15,000 feet) still covered in snowdrifts as late as May, and thickly forested slopes lower down.
Now both powers are engaged in major construction drives to reinforce their positions.
New Delhi bristled at Beijing’s announcement renaming Zemithang — dubbed “Bangqin” — and 10 other sites in April.
Foreign ministry spokesman Arindam Bagchi said the state “is, has been, and will always be an integral and inalienable part of India,” adding: “Attempts to assign invented names will not alter this reality.”
Beijing has sought to change the facts by force before.

Zemithang, just a few kilometers from the boundary, and picture-postcard Tawang, the main town in the district — home to the biggest and oldest Tibetan Buddhist monastery outside Lhasa — were both seized by Chinese forces in 1962 as they inflicted a humiliating defeat on Indian troops before retreating.




A view of the Buddhist monastery at Tawang in India's Arunachal Pradesh state. (AFP)

The Indian army officer charged with preventing a repetition is Brig. N.M. Bendigeri, who commands thousands of troops in Tawang.
Hundreds of his men clashed with Chinese forces in December.
And three years ago in Ladakh, at the western end of the frontier, 20 Indian and four Chinese soldiers were killed in brutal hand-to-hand combat.
Beijing’s announcements “won’t change a thing here,” Bendigeri said.
But in fact, Chinese actions are profoundly changing the once neglected and remote region.




Indian army Brigadier N.M. Bendigeri speaking during an interview with AFP at his office in the Tawang district of India's Arunachal Pradesh state on April 5, 2023. (AFP)

Worried about China’s build-up on the other side, Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government has pumped billions of dollars into ambitious connectivity projects, to boost civilian presence, and establish new paramilitary battalions.
India has scaled up its defenses, deploying cruise missiles, howitzers, US-made Chinook transport helicopters and drones.
At the same time, in an indication of New Delhi’s constant geopolitical balancing act, India is part of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization, which includes China and Russia.
As the grouping’s current chair, on Friday it hosts a meeting of its foreign ministers in Goa.
But in the face of China’s increased assertiveness under leader Xi Jinping it has also become a member of the so-called Quad with the US, Australia and Japan, set up to counter Beijing.
Within days of Beijing’s renaming announcement, India’s powerful interior minister Amit Shah launched a $585 million “vibrant villages” scheme for civilians along the border.
“India wants peace with everyone,” said Shah at Kibithoo, one of the first Arunachal Pradesh villages overrun in 1962.
“But no one will be able to encroach on even an inch of our country’s land.”




A settlement near Sela pass in the Tawang district of India's Arunachal Pradesh state. (AFP)

New Delhi has expressed alarm over its neighbor’s push to develop “xiaokang” — meaning well-to-do villages in Mandarin — along the Line of Actual Control.
Bendigeri fears they will be “dual-use ghost villages,” intended to alter realities on the ground.
He also worries the People’s Liberation Army could use them during a conflict, echoing the way Beijing has built militarised artificial islands in the disputed South China Sea.
But India’s capacity to respond is constrained by the fact its military budget is, according to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute, little more than a quarter of China’s.
And New Delhi can only persuade civilians to stay in the areas, rather than compel them.
Modi’s government said last year it had sanctioned 35 infrastructure schemes and 2,319 kilometers of roads in the state.
Souvenir vendor Tenzin Dorjey, 35, says more tourists are coming to his shop in Tawang, but it is still 12 hours from the nearest airport.




This picture taken on April 3, 2023 shows an Indian army soldier on a Bofors gun at a camp near Pankang Teng Tso Lake in the Tawang district of India's Arunachal Pradesh state. (AFP)

“If the roads improve, everything improves for us and the people who want to come here,” he said.
The showpiece project is a tunnel under the Sela pass which Col. Ravikant Tiwari of the Border Roads Organization said will be the world’s longest tunnel at an altitude of 4,000 meters.
It will provide “all-weather connectivity” and “boost strategic defense infrastructure” where snowstorms regularly cut the existing road every winter, he said, as an army of workers labored in freezing conditions.


Zemithang is where the Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama entered India when he fled into exile in 1959.




The snow-laden Pankang Teng Tso Lake in the Tawang district of India's Arunachal Pradesh state. (AFP)

The location of his crossing has become a pilgrimage site for his followers, who pass India’s last army post and cross a rickety old bridge over a raging river to pray at a “holy tree” he reportedly planted at the time.
A large Chinese military camp is visible on a slope about a kilometer ahead.
Residents used to have “close ties with people from Tibet but things changed after 1962,” said local Sangey Tsetan, 61.
“We remember. We are not the same. We are Buddhists and they’re Communists.”
 


Russian strikes on Ukraine kill 3: officials

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Russian strikes on Ukraine kill 3: officials

KYIV: Overnight Russian strikes on Odesa and Kharkiv killed at least three people, Ukrainian officials said early Monday.
Iranian-made drones pummelled the southern port city of Odesa, igniting fires and damaging apartment buildings and a gas pipeline, according to Sergiy Lysak, head of the city’s military administration.
“A 35-year-old man died as a result of the nighttime attack. Two people were also wounded, including a 19-year-old girl,” he posted in an update.
Regional governor Oleg Kiper said the city was “massively attacked” and confirmed the fires, but did not immediately have information on the toll.
Farther north in the Kharkiv region, state emergency services said they had recovered the bodies of a woman and a 10-year-old boy after a drone attack.
“Three more people were wounded,” the services added in a post on Telegram.
Russia has continued bombarding its neighbor while engaging in US-backed talks to end Europe’s deadliest conflict since World War II.
Though Washington wants to see the war end by mid-year, Kyiv and Moscow remain at odds over territorial divisions, with Russia pushing for full control of Ukraine’s eastern Donetsk region as part of any deal.
Russia occupies around 20 percent of Ukraine’s land.