New Delhi , India (diplomat.so) - India has firmly rebuffed Chinese objections to Prime Minister Narendra Modi's recent visit to Arunachal Pradesh, a northeastern border state claimed by China as part of southern Tibet. In response to statements from Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson Wang Wenbin opposing Modi's activities in the region, India's foreign ministry asserted Arunachal Pradesh's integral status within India. The visit, which took place over the weekend, was aimed at inaugurating crucial infrastructure projects, including a tunnel that promises to bolster all-weather connectivity to the strategically significant border area of Tawang.
The tunnel inauguration holds strategic significance as it is expected to facilitate faster and smoother movement of troops in the frontier region, an area marked by heightened tensions between India and China. Despite China's claims over Arunachal Pradesh, India has consistently rejected them, reiterating that the state has always been an integral part of the Indian territory. Randhir Jaiswal, spokesperson for India's foreign ministry, emphasized the routine nature of Indian leaders' visits to Arunachal Pradesh and dismissed objections to such visits or India's developmental projects in the region as unfounded.
Tensions between India and China have escalated in recent years, particularly following deadly clashes in 2020 that claimed the lives of Indian and Chinese soldiers along their disputed border in the western Himalayas. The poorly demarcated 3,000-kilometer frontier has been a longstanding point of contention between the two nuclear-armed neighbors. Both countries have bolstered their military presence along the border, deploying additional troops and equipment since the 2020 clashes. China's actions, including assigning Chinese names to 11 locations in Arunachal Pradesh last year, have further exacerbated tensions, contributing to the ongoing diplomatic standoff between the two nations.
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