Tibetan Soldiers In Indian Army Seeking Revenge From China
Tibetan Soldiers in Vikas force seeking revenge from China, wants special frontier force fighters back from the dragon: India-China Border Issue. The blood of the Tibetan lions is boiling over the buffalo peaks of eastern Ladakh to withdraw their land occupied by China.
The third generation of hundreds of Tibetan families settled in Ladakh migrating from Tibet is currently in the fray against the dragon as para commandos of the Special Frontier Force, with the army withdrawing their home from China. The Special Frontier Force is directly under the Ministry of Home Affairs.
The 51-year-old Naeema Tenzin, the martyred deputy leader of the Special Frontier Force of the Army, raised in Leh, became the first Tibetan soldier to be killed on the Line of Actual Control (LAC). Naima Tenzin was martyred during an operation on the blacktop peak strategically important to the Indian Army.
He was accompanied by a 24-year-old Tibetan soldier, Tenzin Lodhen. The waves in Sonling, a Tibetan colony in Leh, and Naima Tenzin, wrapped in the flag of Tibet, have further strengthened the Tibetan youth’s willingness to take up arms to avenge China. Special forces and development regiment jawans are considered to be extremely concerned.
The increasing steps of Tibetan soldiers along with the Indian Army in Ladakh have also increased China’s concerns. The soldiers of the Vikas Regiment, a special force of Tibetan soldiers, are considered extremely lethal. They are drawn with the Army’s para commandos. They are different from the Indian Army only to say.
Raised in the atmosphere of Ladakh, Tibetan soldiers, like the soldiers of Ladakh, are experts in warfare in high mountain areas. In such a situation, Army Chief General MM Narwane, who reached Ladakh on Thursday, encouraged the Tibetan soldiers. Tibetan commandos occupy a blacktop area in eastern Ladakh and have strategically deepened China.
There are about seven thousand Tibetans settled in 11 villages of Leh: 1545 Tibetan refugees who took refuge in Chogalmsar and Hanle in Leh in 1969 after China’s occupation of Tibet. Now their population is close to seven thousand. Today they are settled in 11 villages of Leh.
With the strengthening of the Indian Army in Ladakh, the Tibetan families settled in Leh are also hoping that the persecuted China will now be punished. Tibetan society has not forgotten the atrocities of China.
Pi Sering, a Tibetan youth settled in Leh, says that the entire Tibetan society has not forgotten the atrocities that China committed. Sering’s grandfather settled in Leh 51 years ago. All Tibetans settled in Leh with Sering want to return home across Ladakh.
However, they feel offended when it is said that Ladakh shares a border with China. Ladakh is joined by the borders of Tibet, which China occupied and forced Tibetans to take refuge in many countries of the world including India.