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How Arunachal is front & centre in Modi govt’s massive border infra push to counter China

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Of total highway projects worth Rs 1.6 lakh cr announced for Northeast last month, Arunachal got the lion’s share. Meanwhile, BRO’s outlay also saw a significant jump this year
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New Delhi: As work begins on the ambitious Arunachal Frontier Highway, some of India’s other key projects in the Northeast — especially Arunachal Pradesh — are nearing completion while some others, such as a proposed tunnel under the Brahmaputra river, are in the final stages of completion.

In a turnaround from its decades-old policy of being wary of strengthening road connectivity along the Line of Actual Control (LAC) for fear of Chinese aggression, India is now in the middle of a massive border infrastructure push.

Given the ongoing standoff with China in eastern Ladakh, the government has ramped up the speed at which border infrastructure is being created.

"There has been a lot of push on the infrastructure development along the LAC, especially in the Northeast. The idea is to fast-track the ongoing projects and initiate new ones. Such has been the focus that the budget for Border Roads Organisation (BRO) has seen a significant jump,” an official source told ThePrint.

Incidentally, of the total number of highway projects worth Rs 1.6 lakh crore announced by the central government for the Northeast earlier this month, Arunachal Pradesh got the lion’s share of the works, amounting to Rs 44,000 crore.

The push to develop border infrastructure began under the previous United Progressive Alliance (UPA) government but it was under the Modi government that the work picked up.

Together, different central government agencies, including the National Highways Authority of India (NHAI) and the BRO, have built 2,731 km of national highways across the eight Northeastern states between 2014 and 2019.

In the Union Budget 2022-23, BRO’s capital outlay rose by a record 40 per cent to Rs 3,500 crore compared to Rs 2,500 crore in FY 2021-22.

In 2021, BRO completed 102 roads and bridges at various places in the north-western and eastern states — including the world’s highest motorable road at Umling La at 19,024 feet.

The BRO has inducted heavy excavators, spider excavators, and lightweight crawler rock drills, besides other equipment, to fast-track the projects, officials said.

According to the government, the BRO has built 2,089 km of roads along the LAC in the past five years.

Sources said that the emphasis of the Modi government on border infrastructure is visible from the fact that one of the first things it did after coming to power in 2014 was to set up the National Highways and Infrastructure Development Corporation Limited (NHIDCL).

This new organisation was given the mandate to construct highways in the Northeast and hilly areas of Himachal Pradesh and Jammu and Kashmir, which was previously mainly done by the NHAI and BRO directly.

NHIDCL, being a separate wing of the road ministry to focus on the Northeast, has helped expedite project completion, sources had told ThePrint earlier.

What’s in the works
Parliamentary documents show that the central government has sanctioned 2,319 km long roads to be built under the “Arunachal Pradesh package of roads”. Of this, contracts for constructing 1,191 km long roads have been awarded — 1,150 km of this has already been completed.

As of February this year, 35 works amounting to Rs 14,032 crore are in progress in the state of Arunachal Pradesh.

The showpiece project that’s nearing completion is the Sela Tunnel project in Arunachal Pradesh.

Initiated in 2018 and scheduled to be completed by April next year, the Sela tunnel is touted to be the world’s longest bi-lane tunnel above the height of 13,000 feet.
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This strategic project along with Nechiphu tunnel on the 317-km long Balipara-Charduar-Tawang (BCT) road that leads to West Kameng and Tawang districts of Arunachal Pradesh will ensure that both defence and private vehicles will have all-year mobility.

The project, which has main and escape tunnels of 1,555 metres long each, besides a shorter tunnel of 980 m and about 1.2 km of road, will ensure that the Chinese are not able to monitor traffic movement in the area.

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The Sela Pass, at 13,700 feet, is currently visible to the Chinese.

Besides these, official sources told ThePrint that all bridges along the LAC are being upgraded to the standard of the new ones being built.

This means that all bridges will be of Class 70, allowing them to withstand the movement of heavy vehicles.

In addition, the government is building a large number of underground munition depots in the Northeast besides plans to set up special 3D-printed permanent defences.

After the 2020 Sino-Indian clashes at Galwan in eastern Ladakh, the central government had sanctioned 32 roads along the LAC as part of the second phase of the Indo-China Border Roads project, which was approved in September 2020.

Improving connectivity for military & civilians
As reported by ThePrint earlier, the Narendra Modi government has initiated work on the Arunachal Frontier Highway, one of the country’s biggest and toughest projects.

Envisaged by the Army in 2012, the project is a 2,000-km long road that follows the McMahon Line and will begin from Mago in Arunachal Pradesh, adjacent to Bhutan, and pass through Tawang, Upper Subansiri, Tuting, Mechuka, Upper Siang, Debang Valley, Desali, Chaglagam, Kibithu, Dong, before ending at Vijayanagar near the Myanmar border.

With this project, Arunachal Pradesh will get three national highways — the Frontier Highway, the Trans-Arunachal Highway, and the East-West Industrial Corridor Highway.

Six vertical and diagonal inter-highway corridors totalling 2,178 km will be built to provide missing interconnectivity between the three highways as well as to provide faster access to border areas.

The corridors include the 402 km-long Thelamara-Tawang-Nelia Highway, the 391 km-long Itakhola-Pakke-Kessang-Seppa-Parsi Parlo Highway, the 285 km-long Gogamukh-Taliha-Tato Highway, the 398 km-long Akajan-Jorging-Pango Highway, the 298 km-long Pasighat-Bishing Highway, and the 404 km-long Kanubari-Longding Highway.

Sources told ThePrint that every infrastructure project being taken up in the Northeast or ones planned in the future will be to improve connectivity for both civilians and the military.

While work on the ambitious Arunachal Frontier Highway has begun, the other big project that is being finalised is the 15.6-km twin tunnel under the mighty Brahmaputra river that will cut travel time between Assam and Arunachal Pradesh.

Sources said that the alignment of the tunnel is still being discussed but the project has been sanctioned by the Modi government


@SIPRA @etylo @beijingwalker @applesauce @bluesky @SSBN81 @VkdIndian @langda khan
@Abu Shaleh Rumi
 
Hind-Cheen Yudh kub ho raha hae? 😛😛
Infrastructure development of any region is linked with the development of the nation. The residents of the border areas are returning to their villages after the BRO ensured proper connectivity with the district headquarters.
 
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suna hai rods mar mar ke 20 mar diye 100 pakar ker le gay or sath main zameen bhi cheen li 1100sqkm

Bahut sunte ho kahaniyan tum log. 24/7 dramebaazi. Kabhi kuch kaam kar liya karte to aaj ye halat nahin hoti. Khair. Ek aur peg maaro. Sab sunn ho jayega. Sunhare khwab. Handsome ek safed khote pe baith kar door se aa raha hai. Ek haath mein talwaaar, doosre mein katora.
 
sath main zameen bhi cheen li 1100sqkm
If you see the chain of places where the negotiations have been carried out over the last two-and-a-half years, Patrolling Point 15 is one more centerpiece in the whole chain which runs through the Y junction on Raki Nalla, Galwan river (PP14), Patrolling Point 15, PP 17 Alpha, Pangong Tso north and Pangong Tso south bank

This is a chain of locations which provide access towards Aksai Chin and the Depsang Bulge.

These are areas where buffer zones have developed between the Indian Army and the People's Liberation Army.

Patrolling Point 15 is a pass on the ridge line. The pass is called Jianan La.

By climbing the pass up PP 15, Indian troops can reach the depth areas of the Galwan river, and also get access towards the Depsang Bulge.

Therefore, the PLA wanted to deny or stop the movement of our troops in this area. That is why it took such a long time to finally arrive at a consensus for the creation of the buffer zone at PP15. The troops will now disengage at PP15.

The buffer zone means that Indian troops will not patrol to the end of PP15 and the Chinese will not come towards PP15

Indian troops posed a threat to the PLA if they had crossed PP15. Hence, it would have been painful for the PLA to allow Indian troops to patrol up to PP15.

The same thing is true at other friction points. We were patrolling up to Finger 8 earlier, we are not any longer. The Chinese are also patrolling up to Finger 4, they too can't patrol up to this area. We have a post in PP3-Dhan Singh Post - but we didn't have a post in Finger 4 or Finger 8.

At each one of these buffer zones, both forces have distanced and disentangled themselves. So instead of a Line of Actual Control, a sort of 'belt of actual control' has come into being, but this does not provide a settlement to the border dispute.

This PP15 buffer zone has pushed Indian troops a little away while the PLA has pulled back similarly, thus creating a safe zone. It may suit the Chinese who do not want fisticuffs, brawls and scuffles that used to take place regularly for years.

We did not have permanent posts in areas of Raki Nala, PP10, 11, 12 or 13, but went for patrols to those areas and the Chinese used to also patrol up to the area of Burtse which they claim as in the 1959 claim line. India's on paper LAC claim is 18km east of Y-junction in what is historically PLA controlled territory. Which is why Indian troops only asserted control up to 8km east of Y-junction via patrols.

So by creating this so-called 'belt of control' or buffer zones, neither are we able to patrol the areas we were patrolling earlier nor the Chinese are able to patrol the areas they were patrolling.

It is a denial on both sides. A no win situation and that is where the situation rests now

suna hai rods mar mar ke 20 mar diye 100 pakar ker le gay

 
Bahut sunte ho kahaniyan tum log. 24/7 dramebaazi. Kabhi kuch kaam kar liya karte to aaj ye halat nahin hoti. Khair. Ek aur peg maaro. Sab sunn ho jayega. Sunhare khwab. Handsome ek safed khote pe baith kar door se aa raha hai. Ek haath mein talwaaar, doosre mein katora.
yaar wo mara to mara per kaan kiyoo pakrwayee ? ye achi baat nhi . suna hai bhut bura kiya jo pakry gaay veer .
 

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