NEW DELHI, 08 August 2021, (TON): Indian government said that India and China have pulled back troops from a flashpoint zone on their disputed border where they fought a deadly battle last year.
The world’s two most populous nations had poured tens of thousands of extra troops into the high-altitude and disputed Ladakh region after the clash last year.
But the Indian Army said that following talks, rival troops in the Gogra area had moved back in a “phased, coordinated and verified manner” over the last two days.
The statement said “the troops in this area have been in a face-off situation since May last year,”
Indian and Chinese troops fought a hand-to-hand battle in the nearby Galwan valley on June 15 last year that left at least 20 Indians and an unspecified number of Chinese personnel dead.
The increased tensions caused a nosedive in relations between the countries.
India and China, who fought a full-scale border war in 1962, have long accused each other of trying to take territory along their unofficial border known as the Line of Actual Control (LAC).
While sending in the huge reinforcements, the two countries have held multiple rounds of military and diplomatic talks. The last talks were held last Saturday.
The Indian Army said “all temporary structures set up in the Gogra area by both sides had been dismantled.”
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