Military WitnessMultiple WitnessesOfficial ReportGovt. AcknowledgmentCongressional Record
Event Description
Observed Shape
Orb
Craft morphology
Non-Human Intelligence (NHI)
Reported Entities
No NHI encounter documented for this event.
In August 2013, Indian Army troops stationed at Lagan Kher in the Demchock sector of Ladakh — one of the most militarily sensitive areas of the Line of Actual Control separating India and China — reported observations of unidentified aerial objects that were subsequently acknowledged to Indian Parliament by Defence Minister A.K. Antony. The ministerial acknowledgment — a formal statement to Parliament that UAP sightings had occurred in a border area under Indian Army observation — represents one of the most direct official government acknowledgments of UAP events in Indian history.
The Demchock sector is among the most intensely monitored areas of the Indian military's forward deployment in Ladakh, where troops maintain constant surveillance of the Chinese side of the Line of Actual Control. The soldiers who made the observations were operating surveillance equipment specifically designed to detect incursions across the border, making them among the most technically equipped and observationally prepared military observers possible. Their professional function was identification of aerial and ground contacts — making UAP reports from this location particularly significant.
The objects were described in reports that reached Parliament as unidentified lights and aerial forms that could not be attributed to Chinese drones, aircraft, or natural phenomena. The proximity to Chinese territory made the objects' identification an acute national security priority — any unidentified aerial activity in the Demchock sector would be treated as a potential Chinese military asset until definitively ruled out.
Defence Minister Antony's statement to Parliament was carefully worded to acknowledge the sightings without attributing them to Chinese military activity or to any other identified source. The political sensitivity of the statement — which implicitly confirmed that Indian military surveillance in a forward area could not identify aerial objects operating in its observation zone — made the minister's acknowledgment significant both as a UAP document and as a statement about the limits of Indian military identification capability in the Ladakh theater.
The 2013 Demchock reports were consistent with a pattern of Indian Army UAP observations in Ladakh dating back to the CIA-documented incidents of 1968, and continuing through subsequent Army and ITBP (Indo-Tibetan Border Police) reports from the high-altitude plateau regions of the India-China border.