No Border Village Evacuated, Say Army Sources Amid China Tension

India-China: Troops from both sides clashed at a point called PP-14 or patrolling point 14 a few kilometres from the LAC, the de-facto border between India and China.

New Delhi: No village has been evacuated close to the Line of Actual Control or LAC, army sources said today amid tension after a deadly face-off between India and China on Monday. Mobile network in border areas is operational; data services, though, have been snapped. The Srinagar-Leh highway remains open to traffic.
The clash took place at a point called PP-14 or patrolling point 14 a few kilometres from the LAC, the de-facto border between India and China.

New satellite images from Reuters taken on Tuesday shows a massive build-up on the Chinese side of the LAC. Sources say the army is apprehensive that the Chinese may deploy troops at Pakistan Administered Kashmir (PaK) to build pressure.

The army is reviewing decades-old rules of engagement with China of not opening fire on confronting Chinese troops. The Navy and Air Force are also on alert at the LAC.

On Monday, hundreds of soldiers clashed at a height of 15,000 feet, near the Galwan river. Indian soldiers were assaulted with iron rods, stones wrapped in barbed wire and nail-studded clubs in the fight that started in the afternoon and went on till midnight.

Soldiers were even thrown off a high ridge into the icy Galwan river. About 45 Chinese soldiers were also killed or injured, said army sources. The area also saw violent clashes in 1962, when Indian posts were overrun. But in over five decades, there had been no violence and no active Chinese presence.

With inputs from NDTV