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  2. Ladakh - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ladakh

    Out of the 857-kilometre-long (533 mi) border in Ladakh, only 368 km (229 mi) is the International Border, and the remaining 489 km (304 mi) is the Line of Actual Control. [ 56 ] [ 57 ] The stand-off involving the most troops was in September 2014 in the disputed Chumar region when 800 to 1,000 Indian troops and 1,500 Chinese troops came into ...

  3. 2024 India-China Border Patrol Agreement - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2024_India-China_Border...

    2024 India-China Border Patrol Agreement restored the patrolling rights in Depsang Plains and Demchok region between mutual countries. [13] The deal ensures each side is following the agreement for resuming the patrolling operations in the Ladakh region and underscores the respective territory claims of both countries.

  4. Demchok sector - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Demchok_sector

    The Demchok sector with China's claim line in the west and India's claim line in the east. The Line of Actual Control, shown in bold, starting from Charding La in south runs along the Charding Nullah and then west along the Indus River to Lagankhel near confluence with the Chibra stream and till confluence near Fukche with the Koyul Lungpa river from Chang La, then heads northwest to the ...

  5. Sino-Indian border dispute - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sino-Indian_border_dispute

    Chinese troops attacked Indian border posts in Ladakh in the west and crossed the McMahon line in the east. There was a brief border clash in 1967 in the region of Sikkim, despite there being an agreed border in that region. In 1987 and in 2013, potential conflicts over the Lines of Actual Control were successfully de-escalated.

  6. Demchok, Ladakh - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Demchok,_Ladakh

    The Demchok sector with China's claim line in the west and India's claim line in the east. The Line of Actual Control, shown in bold, starting from Charding La in south runs north along the Charding Nullah to Demchok and then west along Indus River to Lagankhel near confluence with the Chibra stream and then till confluence near Fukche with the Koyul Lungpa river from Chang La, then heads ...

  7. Demchok, Ngari Prefecture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Demchok,_Ngari_Prefecture

    The village of Demchok was mentioned in the Chronicles of Ladakh as the boundary point between Tibet and Ladakh demarcated in the 1684 Treaty of Tingmosgang. [12]When Henry Strachey visited the area in 1847, he described Demchok as a single hamlet with settlements on both the sides of the Lhari stream and the stream as the prevailing border between Ladakh and Tibet. [13]

  8. Depsang Plains - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Depsang_Plains

    Ladakh border claimed by the Republic of China in a 1947 map. [ c ] Chinese claim lines in the Depsang Plains: 1956 claim line in green, 1960 claim line in dark brown, 1962 ceasefire line in orange. [ d ] Current situation at the mouth of Depsang Bulge: the established LAC from 1962 in red, the effective LAC in 2020 as per OpenStreetMap in ...

  9. Charding Nullah - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charding_Nullah

    The Charding Nullah, traditionally known as the Lhari stream and called Demchok River by China, [a] is a small river that originates near the Charding La pass that is also on the border between the two countries and flows northeast to join the Indus River near a peak called "Demchok Karpo" or "Lhari Karpo" (white holy peak of Demchok).