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  India   Top Indian commander holds talks with PLA

Top Indian commander holds talks with PLA

PTI | K.J.M. VARMA
Published : Dec 17, 2015, 3:40 am IST
Updated : Dec 17, 2015, 3:40 am IST

On a key visit to China after his predecessor was denied visa, the head of the Indian Army’s Northern Command has held talks with top defence officials here, focusing on fighting terror and maintainin

Indian Army’s Northern Command GOC-in-C Lt. Gen. D.S. Hooda holds talk with China’s Gen. Qi Jianguo, deputy chief  general staff
 Indian Army’s Northern Command GOC-in-C Lt. Gen. D.S. Hooda holds talk with China’s Gen. Qi Jianguo, deputy chief general staff

On a key visit to China after his predecessor was denied visa, the head of the Indian Army’s Northern Command has held talks with top defence officials here, focusing on fighting terror and maintaining peace on the Ladakh border, where many PLA incursions have occurred.

Lt. Gen. D.S. Hooda, who is heading a six-member military delegation of top officials of his command, arrived here on December 14 on a six-day visit to interact with his counterparts and to visit some of the military command centres which look after the India-China border.

He held talks with General Qi Jianguo, Deputy Chief of General Staff, at the People’s Liberation Army Headquarters Tuesday during which the two sides stressed on the need to ensure peace and tranquillity along the border, an Indian embassy statement here said Wednesday.

Lt. Gen. Hooda is the first Northern area commander to visit China since Beijing denied regular visa to his predecessor Lt. Gen. B.S. Jaswal in 2010 on the grounds that his command area included the “disputed” Jammu and Kashmir, which sparked a diplomatic row between the two countries. During that time China also resorted to issuing “stapled visas” to residents of Jammu and Kashmir on the same grounds which drew strong protests from India. In retaliation, New Delhi also cancelled all military-to-military exchanges.

Indian officials argued that the bilateral military-to-military ties are not complete without the visit of the Northern Commander.

After hectic diplomatic parleys, China subsequently rolled back its decision to issue paper visas to Jammu and Kashmir residents and gradually increased its interactions with the Northern area command whose area of operations covers 646 km of the 3,488-km-long Line of Actual Control between both the two countries besides border with Pakistan.