China protests the visit of an Indian minister to Arunachal Pradesh.
According to a foreign ministry official, China vehemently opposes an Indian home minister's trip to Arunachal Pradesh and sees his activities there as a breach of Beijing's territorial sovereignty.
Some locations in what India considers its eastern state of Arunachal Pradesh have new names in China, and Beijing believes those locations are on its soil.
In answer to a query regarding the visit by India's Minister of Home Affairs Amit Shah, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Wang Wenbin stated on Monday that "Zangnan is China's territory.""The Indian official's visit to Zangnan violates China's territorial sovereignty and is not helpful to the peace and tranquility of the border situation," said a Chinese official of the visit.
The entire nation could sleep soundly in their homes because of the diligent work of the security forces on India's frontiers, Shah was quoted as saying during the launch of a scheme named "Vibrant Villages" in Kibithoo, the border village of Arunachal Pradesh. According to the home minister, border regions are the Indian government's "first priority". "The days when anyone could trespass on Indian country are long gone. No one can now even claim land the size of a needlepoint, the speaker said.
Skirmishes between China and India over the disputed border area and recent conflicts in mountainous regions have severely strained relations between the nuclear-armed rivals. The two nations' 3,800 km (2,360 miles) of the ill-defined border saw fighting in 1962, and recent conflicts in mountainous areas have further strained relations. Early in April, China's Ministry of Civil Affairs released a statement claiming to have "standardized" the names of 11 locations, including five mountains, in what China refers to as its southern Tibet region. This declaration set off the most recent exchange of insults between the neighbors.
The declaration was accompanied by a map showing the 11 locations that China had renamed as being in "Zangnan," which is Chinese for southern Tibet. Arunachal Pradesh was shown to be a part of southern Tibet, and the Brahmaputra River was marked as the border between China and India. The idea was opposed by India's foreign ministry, which issued the following statement through a spokesman: "Arunachal Pradesh is, has been, and always will be an integral and inalienable part of India."
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