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Amit Shah promises to boost security across unmarked border with China in Arunachal

The Indian home minister’s comments came hours after Beijing said it firmly opposed his visit and viewed his activities in the area as violating China’s territorial sovereignty

Amit Shah promises to boost security across unmarked border with China in Arunachal

India's home minister Amit Shah on Monday (10) visited Arunachal Pradesh, a state located on the Himalayan frontier, which China claims as its own territory.

He launched a development scheme worth (£471 million ($585m) that he claimed would enhance the security of the unmarked border.


Shah stated that the initiative would cover almost 3,000 villages situated in four states and a federally administered territory on the Chinese border.

The aim of the scheme is to address the issue of migration from border areas.

During his visit, Shah also mentioned that Indian troops have been stationed in the area for a long time to ensure that nobody tries to occupy its borders or encroach on its land.

His comments came hours after Beijing said it firmly opposed his planned visit to the eastern state and viewed his activities in the area as violating China's territorial sovereignty.

Arunachal Pradesh has become a new flashpoint between New Delhi and Beijing, whose relations have been strained since bloody clashes between their armies elsewhere in the western Himalayas in 2020 in which 24 soldiers were killed.

In December last year, troops from the two sides engaged in scuffles in the state's Tawang sector, and last week India rejected the renaming by China of 11 places, including five mountains, in Arunachal Pradesh.

A map released last week showed the 11 places renamed by China as being within "Zangnan", or southern Tibet in Chinese, with Arunachal Pradesh included in southern Tibet.

Shah, a close confidant of Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and considered the second most powerful leader in the government, said Indians in the hinterland were able to sleep in peace because of the "bravery and sacrifices" of the troops on the border.

"They have ensured that no one can eye our borders," Shah told a public meeting in Kibithoo, a border village in the Anjaw district of Arunachal Pradesh, one of India's last inhabited settlements just miles from the Chinese frontier.

"Today we proudly say, gone are the days when anyone could encroach on our territory," Shah said, speaking in Hindi and without naming China.

India and China fought a short but bloody war in 1962, and Kibithoo was among the first to be overrun by Chinese forces.

Shah said there was a worry 10 years ago that the village was emptying, but that the 'Vibrant Villages Programme' he launched on Monday would provide facilities such as banking, power, cooking gas, jobs, physical and digital connectivity to what he called "the first village of India".

Since coming to power in 2014, the Modi government has pumped millions of dollars to boost military and civilian infrastructure along its 3,800-km (2,360-mile) frontier with China which, analysts say, has riled Beijing.

"Zangnan is China's territory," Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson Wang Wenbin said earlier on Monday in response to a question on Shah's visit.

(Reuters)

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