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MONDAY, JULY 07, 2025
Satellite images reveal new Chinese village in disputed border area

South Asia

TBS Report
24 January, 2021, 01:15 pm
Last modified: 24 January, 2021, 01:35 pm

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Satellite images reveal new Chinese village in disputed border area

Source close to Chinese military says development of about 100 houses was built within China’s territory as part of a nationwide poverty alleviation scheme

TBS Report
24 January, 2021, 01:15 pm
Last modified: 24 January, 2021, 01:35 pm
It is not known exactly when the houses were built, but satellite images of the same area taken in August 2019 show it to be grassland. Photo: Twitter
It is not known exactly when the houses were built, but satellite images of the same area taken in August 2019 show it to be grassland. Photo: Twitter

China has built an entire village in a part of Arunachal Pradesh that has been at the centre of the country's long-running border dispute with India, according to newly released satellite images dated November 1, 2020.

Indian broadcaster NDTV showed the pictures of the Chinese settlement, is located on the banks of the Tsari Chu River and comprises about 100 houses, South China Morning Post reported.

A report by Xinhua said most of the houses were built in October last year, while Chinese officials and observers said the development was part of Beijing's poverty alleviation efforts in rural regions.

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The development of new roads for use by the military in the area had provided a "good opportunity to build houses for local Tibetans using poverty relief money," said a source close to the Chinese military, who asked not to be named as he is not authorised to talk to the media.

Arunachal Pradesh is regarded by New Delhi as an Indian state, but Beijing claims about 90,000 square kilometres (35,000 square miles) of it as South Tibet.

China and India have been in a border dispute over the Line of Actual Control for decades, and tensions flared in June last year when soldiers from the two sides became embroiled in a deadly clash in the Galwan Valley. There has been an uneasy stand-off in the area ever since.

The Ministry of External Affairs in Delhi said it was aware of "reports of China undertaking construction work along the border areas with India".

India had also stepped up the construction of border infrastructure, including roads and bridges, to improve lives of the people of Arunachal Pradesh, it said.

According to a 2017 document, Beijing plans to build 624 villages on the disputed border as part of its poverty alleviation scheme and to ensure political stability in the Tibet autonomous region.

Chinese President Xi Jinping has set a goal to create a "moderately well off" society by 2021, and has earmarked more than 30 billion yuan (US$4.6 billion) to finance the construction of homes, schools, hospitals and infrastructure projects.

Zhang Jiadong, director of the Institute of South Asia Studies at Fudan University in Shanghai said that in recent years both China and India had tried to expand their presence in the disputed region.

"Ways of doing that include guiding residents to live closer to the border and building roads, bridges and civil facilities," he said.

Both sides were trying to exert their control over the border and neither was willing to make any concessions, he said.

Zhu Yongbiao, a professor of international relations at Lanzhou University, said that describing the development as China building a village was wrong as the area had always been residential.

"China has just upgraded the living infrastructure, building new facilities such as communications facilities and water sanitation facilities, in order to improve living standards," he said.

However, Indian media reports in December used satellite images to show that a new Chinese development in Pangda – about 10km (six miles) east of the India-Bhutan-China trijunction – had been built 2.5km inside Bhutan's territory.

Brahma Chellaney, a professor of strategic studies at the Centre for Policy Research, a think tank in Delhi, said Beijing's village-building activity in the disputed Himalayan region was further evidence of its aggressive expansionism.

"The civilian settlements are designed to create a basis in international law for its territorial claims, which currently lack a sound legal standing," he said.

"China's construction of a village is just the latest example of how it is applying the South China Sea model to encroach on areas inside India, Bhutan and Nepal."

Top News / World+Biz

Arunachal Pradesh / Arunachar Pradesh / India-China border / India-China / India-China Border Dispute / India-China Boundary Issue

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