On 4 November, India carried out its first patrol in the Depsang plains, nearly two weeks after it signed a disengagement ...
The agreement reached last month between New Delhi and Beijing, which led to a meeting between Prime Minister Narendra Modi ...
Last week, Indian Army had resumed patrolling at Demchok along LAC in eastern Ladakh nearly four and a half years after ...
India and China signed an agreement on patrolling arrangements at the two sectors, leading to disengagement at the Ninglung ...
Limitations of disengagement: First, the latest disengagement and the accompanying patrolling agreement are limited to the Depsang plains in the north and Demchok in the south. This border pact makes ...
The western part of the plains is controlled by India while the eastern part falls in Aksai Chin, occupied by China.
The formal patrolling is yet to commence in the Depsang plains in Ladakh after disengagement was completed there a few days ...
Days after the disengagement process between the Indian Army and China’s PLA concluded, patrolling began at the crucial ...
In a significant step towards easing border tensions, Indian Army patrols have resumed at multiple patrolling points in the ...
The Indian and Chinese armies resumed patrolling in eastern Ladakh's Demchok and Depsang Plains after completing ...
Moving swiftly after completing the process of disengagement at the friction points of Demchok and Depsang Plains along the Line of Actual Control in eastern Ladakh, Indian troops have resumed ...
Troops from India and China exchanged sweets along the Line of Actual Control (LAC) during Diwali, marking a de-escalation in ...