India and China are holding two-day border talks in New Delhi following a series of Chinese incursions into Indian territories in Ladakh in recent weeks.
Delegates from the two sides , who are part of a special team formed last year to solve border issues, are meeting Tuesday to discuss measures to enhance peace and tranquility along the line of actual control between the two giant countries.
This border talk-meeting comes just days after the New Delhi government agreed to deploy 50,000-strong mountain strike corps along the border with the Communist country.
India was apparently forced to gear up its military strength at the border by the continuous incursions of the Chinese armies in the Ladakh region.
Last April, the two countries had a 21-day standoff at the Depsang valley near the Line of Actual Control in Ladakh following China's foray into the region.
China has made three incursions into the Indian territories last week alone, according to the Indian leading news channel NDTV.
Beijing considers around 90,000 square kilometers in India's Northeastern State Arunachal Pradesh as a part of China, which it calls Southern Tibet. New Delhi, on its part, accuses China of occupying 38,000 square kilometers of its territory in the Aksai Chin plateau in the western Himalayas.
The border dispute between the two countries was born soon after their buffer zone Tibet was occupied by the Chinese government in 1959.
Exiled Tibetans believe a free Tibet is the only genuine solution to the border disputes between the two sides.