New Delhi:
Chinese troops detained five Indian nationals in Chumar area of Ladakh well inside the Indian territory and took them to their side of the border last week, in perhaps the first such incident along the Line of Actual Control (LAC).
Sources said the five people and their cattle were detained by the People's Liberation Army (PLA) troops a few kilometres within the Indian territory and taken to the Chinese side across the LAC, in an apparent bid by the troops to stake claim on the area.
They were handed over to Indian side by the PLA troops after efforts were made under the existing border mechanisms between the two countries, sources said.
The Army Headquarters sought to play down the incident saying that the matter was resolved "amicably" but sources said the Chinese side relented only after the local Indian Army authorities sought a flag meeting on the matter and warned that the issue would be raised at a higher level.
The headquarters also said that the detained Indian nationals were not army porters as was being speculated but were civilians.
It is learnt that the local Army authorities on both sides established communication on the issue, the sources said.
The incident has come after Prime Minister Manmohan Singh signed the Border Defence Cooperation Agreement with China in October seeking to prevent any flare ups between the armies of the two countries on the LAC.
Defence Minister AK Antony had recently warned that the new border pact does not guarantee that nothing will happen in these areas in future.
Chumar has been one of the most active areas on the LAC in terms of transgressions by the Chinese troops.
Located 300 kilometres from Leh, it has always been an area of discomfort for the Chinese troops as this is the only place along the China-India border where they do not have any direct access to the LAC.