The roads
are to be constructed along the border in Jammu and Kashmir, Arunachal
Pradesh, Sikkim, Uttarakhand and Arunachal Pradesh.
The plan envisages the construction of 804 km of roads and the project will cost an estimated Rs 1,937 crore.
“The
Chinese forces have roads right up to their border outposts and our
forces have to trek for days in some areas,” said a home ministry
official.
The
project for constructing these roads was stuck because the Environment
Ministry had not given green clearances, but now the NDA government
wants to expedite the work and the required clearances have been
obtained, officials said.
The
project began in 2004 but not much work has been done so far. The
Environment Ministry was reluctant to give environment clearances and
the home ministry was unable to engage contractors.
“As
of now, even the first phase of construction is not over. The project
was divided into three to four phases. We are hoping after the recent
stand-offs and the government claiming to be bold against China, the
road construction will speed up,” said an officer in the security
establishment.
“Since
there are no roads, our forces have to walk to border outposts. All the
patrolling has to be done on foot, making the border vulnerable to
incursions,” the officer added.
Sources
said there is also a need for dedicated air support for the ITBP to
facilitate quicker movement of troops and for transporting rations and
other materials.
The Home Ministry wants the Finance Ministry to also clear a proposal for building 54 new border outposts along the border.
An
in-principle approval was given to the plan by the previous UPA
government just before the elections in April, but no sanctions have
been made so far.
Border stand-off ends as troops withdraw
It's official. India and China have ended their fortnight-long stand-off along the Line of Actual Control (LAC).
China’s
foreign ministry on Tuesday confirmed that both Beijing and New Delhi
had withdrawn their troops completely and the forces simultaneously
returned to the positions held by them on September 1.
The
ministry said both sides had “reached a consensus to properly resolve
the recent stand-off between the frontier defence troops at the
border”.
A
statement from India’s Ministry of External Affairs said a flag meeting
of Indian and Chinese border commanders held at Spanggur Gap on Tuesday
confirmed that the standoff at Chumar and Demchok had been
“successfully terminated”.
The
Chinese government in Beijing said both sides would “continue to
communicate” on the boundary issues by putting proper system in place.
On
Tuesday, a commentary in the Communist Party’s People’s Daily newspaper
said “unsolved territorial disputes” would “not affect the development
of Sino- Indian relations”.
Commenting
on PM Narendra Modi’s ongoing visit to the US, the article also said
China had no reason to be concerned about India-US relations.
- dailymail
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