Watch: China releases dramatic footage of Galwan clash
- The clash that took place in June is considered to be one the deadliest battle ever
- The CCTV voiceover said the Chinese soldiers were ''heroically sacrificed''
- Atleast 20 Indian soldiers were killed in the clash
Chinese state media on February 19 released a dramatic footage of the deadly clash in the Galwan Valley between the Indian and the Chinese troops that took place in June last year, according to PTI.
The state broadcaster CCTV appeared to show Indian troops wading through a river towards Chinese soldiers in the barren and ice-covered Karakoram Mountains, carrying sticks and shields.
The China’s Defence Ministry mention about the death of their own four soldiers and officers in the clash. According to reports, the clash took place when Chinese soldiers didn’t let the Indian troop march to the patrolling point. As a result, the incident claimed the lives of 20 Indian soldiers.
A bilateral accord prevents the use of guns by either side, and brutal clashes between the two sides on the ill-defined border often involve sticks, rocks and fist-fights. “They have now moved another new tent here,” one soldier says in the video, which claims the Indian side broke the consensus and crossed the line to “provoke” Chinese soldiers.
The footage shows a large melee of troops from both sides and clashes in the dark, before Chinese soldiers are seen treating a man on the floor whose head is covered in blood. The high-altitude border battle in the Galwan valley in June was one of the deadliest clashes between the two sides in recent decades.
Beijing acknowledged that the clash had resulted in casualties but did not confirm if any Chinese soldiers died until this week.
The CCTV voiceover said the Chinese soldiers were “heroically sacrificed”.
Battalion commander Chen Hongjun and three other soldiers have been given posthumous awards, the defense ministry said. State media reported that the youngest soldier to die was 19. India and China fought a border war in 1962 and have long accused each other of seeking to cross their frontier — which has never been properly agreed — in India’s Ladakh region, just opposite Tibet.
Beijing and New Delhi later sent tens of thousands of extra troops to the border, but said last week they had agreed to “disengage” along the border area.
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