Governments working together to solve the case of Chinese soldier who crossed into India in 1963
He was released in 1969, after which he settled in a Madhya Pradesh village and married a local woman. He has three children.
The Chinese government is working with its Indian counterparts to ensure the return of one of its soldiers who crossed over five decades ago. The state media said the soldier’s safe return would help improve bilateral relations between the countries, reported PTI.
Wang Qi, 77, was detained when he crossed over in January 1963. He said he was “tasked with building roads for the Chinese army” and was captured by the Indian Army when he “strayed erroneously” into the Indian side. He was released in 1969, and he has been living since then in Tirodi, a village in Madhya Pradesh. He married a local woman and has three children with her. His is called Raj Bahadur in the village. He had approached Indian and Chinese authorities in the past seeking permission to travel to China to meet his family.
External Affairs Ministry spokesperson Vikas Swarup said the government was looking into the details of the case. Beijing, too, confirmed that the two governments were working together to find a solution. “We sympathise with what happened to him and will provide assistance to him. We believe under joint efforts and by respecting his [Wang Qi] will, the case will be solved properly,” said Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Lu Kang.
The case drew attention from the Chinese media after a recent BBC report on him. The state-run Global Times took note of the soldier’s case and wrote about him. “Although it’s unclear whether Wang is a prisoner of war, it is inhumane to have isolated the elderly man from his family for such a long time,” said the report.