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Pass to be opened between China and India

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herjihad View Drop Down
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    Posted: 15 May 2006 at 6:46am

Bismillah,

I saw on MHz tv today that an important pass between India and China which was closed in about 1963 is to be opened soon.  Anybody know why it was closed and why they decided to open it? 

The report stated that pilgrims will be able to travel more easily from China to India and that it will facilitate trade.

Al-Hamdulillah (From a Married Muslimah) La Howla Wa La Quwata Illa BiLLah - There is no Effort or Power except with Allah's Will.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote salman Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 15 May 2006 at 8:26am
uh ?  i am hearing this news from you sister. no such news has occured in india as yet. as of i know the border issue of india with china is very sensitive as india has already fought a war with china. i don't think they might have opened any such pass.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote herjihad Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 15 May 2006 at 2:30pm

Bismillah,

http://www.mhznetwork.org/

I saw it this morning on News from Bejing in English, I think.  I watched a couple news shows in a row.  I can't remember the name exactly but it was something like nakata pass.

http://www.accultured.com/border.shtml

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sino-Indian_War

Sino-Indian War

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Sino-Indian War

Though a short border skirmish, the Sino-Indian War created bitter enemity between the two Asian giants, China and India.
Date: September 8-November 21, 1962
Location: Southern China & Northern India
Result: Chinese Victory and subsequent ceasefire
Combatants
PRC India
Strength
4 Million 1 Million
Casualties
3,000 Killed or Wounded 4,000 Killed or Wounded

The Sino-Indian Border War (Simplified Chinese: ��ӡ�߾�ս��; Traditional Chinese: ��ӡ߅����; pinyin: Zh��ng-Y��n Bi��nj��ng Zh��nzh��ng; Hindi:चीन व भारत के राजनीतिक संबंध), was a war, declared from September 1962, triggered by a dispute over the Himalayan border in Aksai Chin between the People's Republic of China (PRC) and the Republic of India. The war ended with the Chinese unilaterally declaring a ceasefire on November 21, 1962 after defeating India in Aksai Chin. The disputed area was claimed to be strategic for the PRC, as it enabled a western connection (China National Highway G219) between the Chinese territories of Tibet and Xinjiang. Aksai Chin remains in Chinese control today.

The Sino-Indian War remains one of the largest military conflicts fought at such a high altitude, with combat taking place at over 14,000 feet (4267 meters) [1]. For another high-altitude conflict, see the Kargil War of 1999.

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< =text/> //

Causes of the war

British India and Tibet had never clearly marked their mutual border. The British Survey of India mapped the boundaries of Aksai Chin and the British government put up boundary markers, but administrative borders lay further south. The British claimed that the McMahon Line, which was drawn up during the Simla Conference of 1914 and agreed to by the Tibetans, was valid. However, owing to various disagreements with the British, the Qing Dynasty authorities and the Republic of China refused to accept terms imposed by Britain. China refused to recognize the boundary on the grounds that Tibet, as an alleged dependency of China since the rule of the Qing Dynasty, could not make treaties. As a result, China did not recognize the validity of the McMahon Line. Even the independence of India in 1947 and the establishment of the PRC in October 1 1949 did not fully resolve the border issues.

India and the PRC maintained good relations through the 1950s, which featured the Five Principles of Peaceful Coexistence, proposed by the prime ministers of the two countries in 1953. However, after the PRC occupied Tibet in 1950, the Indian government under Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru adopted a policy of forward military deployment in the border area. China disputed India's claims about the demarcation of the Line of Actual Control. For several years up to 1962, India and China both maintained forces in the disputed area. At times, each side accused the other of having moved troops into 'their' side of the border as each side tried to extend its line of actual control. A few skirmishes occurred during this time.

Both Chinese and Indian sources continue to dispute the cause of the escalation into war. India disputed the troop movement and border claimed by China. Negotiations between the two countries deteriorated over the following months, which transformed a boundary problem into a dispute, which then progressed into a border war. China maintained that parts of the boundaries remained undetermined and up for negotiation. Indians held that previous events had already determined the boundaries, and decided to establish checkposts all along them. Fighting began shortly thereafter, with both sides claiming that the other had started the aggression[2].

Events in the war

Indian and Chinese units maintained close contact throughout September 1962; however, hostile fire occurred only infrequently. On September 8, 1962, a 60-strong (misreported as 600) Chinese People's Liberation Army (PLA) unit surrounded one of the Indian forward posts at Dhola on the Thagla Ridge, three kilometers north of the McMahon Line. Nehru had gone to London to attend a Commonwealth Prime Ministers Conference there, and when told of the act, told the media that the Indian Army had instructions to "free our territory". However, Nehru's directives to Defense Minister V.K. Krishna Menon remained unclear, and the response, codenamed Operation LEGHORN, got underway only slowly. By the time an Indian battalion reached the Thagla Ridge on September 16, Chinese units controlled both banks of the Namka Chu River. The day after, India's Chief of the Army Staff Kaul ordered his men to re-take the Thagla Ridge.

On September 20, at one of the bridges on the river a firefight developed, killing nine Chinese and Indian soldiers. On October 12, Nehru proclaimed India's intention to drive the Chinese out of areas claimed by India. On October 14, Indian defence minister Menon called for fighting China to the last man and the last gun. On October 20, 1962, the Chinese People's Liberation Army launched two coordinated attacks, 1000 kilometers apart, in the Chip Chap valley in Ladakh and the Namkachu river. After securing a substantial portion of the disputed territory, the Chinese made an offer to negotiate on October 24. The Indian government promptly rejected this offer, and tried to regroup during the lull in the fighting.

Indian forces had offered determined but insufficient resistance. The Indian deployment covered a large area. Many Indian units required airlift for resupply. The Indian jawans (soldiers) also lacked both good supplies and good training for mountain combat. Some skirmishes also took place in Sikkim (at that time an Indian protectorate) at the Nathula Pass.

By November 18 the PLA had penetrated close to the outskirts of Tezpur, Assam, a major frontier town nearly fifty kilometers from the Assam-North-East Frontier Agency border. Due to either logistical problems (according to Indian accounts) or for political reasons (according to Chinese accounts) the PLA did not advance farther, and on November 21 it declared a unilateral cease-fire. The United States Air Force flew in massed supplies to India in November, 1962, but neither side wished to continue hostilities. The PLA withdrew to positions it had occupied before the war and on which China had staked its diplomatic claim.

After the war

After India's defeat, Indian Defense Minister Menon resigned. Prime Minister Nehru also faced significant accusations from government officals. Neither China nor India officially admitted to starting the war, while accusation continues between the two governments. Despite winning the war, the Chinese government still faced questions regarding its diplomacy [3]. The Indian government commissioned an investigation, resulting in the Henderson-Brooks Report on the causes of the war and the reasons for defeat. However, the Indian government has refused to declassify the relevant documents. No known commission of inquiry has reported on the Chinese side on the events that led to the war. India's defeat in 1962 led to an overhaul of Indian Army in terms of doctrine, training, organisation and equipment.

In the early 1980s, following a shift of emphasis in the Indian military, the Indian army began to actively patrol the Line of Actual Control (LoAC). Friction begin to ensue over the Chinese occupation of the Sumdorong Chu pasturage, lying north of Tawang. The Indian media gave the matter national prominence, and an angry exchange of official protests between the Chinese and Indian governments followed. The Indian Parliament passed a bill setting up the state of Arunachal Pradesh, a territory in which China claims 11 of 15 districts.

In 1993 and 1996, the two sides signed the Sino-Indian Bilateral Peace and Tranquillity Accords, an agreement on maintaining peace and tranquillity along the LoAC. Ten meetings of a Sino-Indian Joint Working Group (SIJWG) and five of an expert group to determine where the LoAC lies have taken place but little progress has occurred. Recently as a goodwill gesture during the visit of Chinese Prime Minister to the India, China recognised the territory of Sikkim, as belonging to India. Neither the Indian nor the PRC government appear very interested in disturbing the status quo, and the disputed boundary, called by Indians the Line of Actual Control or the McMahon Line, does not currently appear to be a possible major flashpoint. Military commissions from China and India meet regularly in the capitals of both countries to discuss the status of the border. However, they have made little progress in resolving this contentious border issue.



Edited by herjihad
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote salman Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 16 May 2006 at 12:30am
i must inform this to the indian government that china has opened a pass. i must do so as soon as possible. otherwise .... oh man, or else another war may break out ! thanx sister for informing.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote salman Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 16 May 2006 at 1:57am

Originally posted by salman salman wrote:

i must inform this to the indian government that china has opened a pass. i must do so as soon as possible. otherwise .... oh man, or else another war may break out ! thanx sister for informing.

don't take it seriously sister, i was just joking  

by the way, i am surprised that this news has not occured in india as yet.

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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote herjihad Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 16 May 2006 at 8:32am

Bismillah,

It could be a lie.  It was just one news program after all.  I didn't watch that news program today, but I'll keep looking for something else about it.  Let us know if you hear anything.  JAK.

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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote herjihad Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 14 June 2006 at 8:16am

Bismillah,

I haven't seen any further reference to this.

Al-Hamdulillah (From a Married Muslimah) La Howla Wa La Quwata Illa BiLLah - There is no Effort or Power except with Allah's Will.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Angel Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 15 June 2006 at 10:05pm

I think salman is behind in the times, this was announced back in April  

From an indian source:

Quote Key trade route on China-India border through Sikkim
Thursday, April 6 2006 15:42 Hrs (IST) - World Time -

Beijing: China today (Apr 6, 2006) announced that a vital trade market on the strategic Sino-India border along Sikkim would open twice a week from June, setting up the first direct trade link between the two countries since the 1962 war.

"The 6,400-sq-mt market, named Dongqinggang, is located by the mountain road 16 kms from the 4,545-mt high Nathu La Pass, where Yatung County of China's Tibet Autonomous Region and India's Sikkim State meet," the official Xinhua news agency reported, signalling that China has recognised Sikkim as part of India.

According to the plan, the market would open twice a week from June for four hours a day after its construction is completed, the report from Lhasa, Tibet's capital, said.

"Construction is going on at a brisk pace and 60 per cent of it has been completed. Everything should be finished before the deadline," said Basang Cering, an official of Yatung County, also the Chief Director at the construction site.

Construction of roads leading to Nathu La Pass is also under way, but is often clogged by heavy snows. A total of 1,550 workers are now working on the site to try to finish it in time.

Nathu La Pass, which used to be a 'hot spot' for trade between China and India, took over 80 per cent of their total border trading volume at the beginning of the 20th century. But trading over the Pass was suspended in 1962.

Four decades later, China and India signed a memorandum in 2004 to resume trading at the Nathu La Pass and, in the ensuing year, China's State Council, the cabinet, approved the construction of a trade market near the Pass.

The decision to resume trade between India and China through Nathula was first taken in 2003 during the historic visit of former Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee to Beijing.

South Block had interpreted Nathu-La's acceptance as the Indian trade point to be Beijing's first step towards fully recognising Sikkim as an integral part of India.

Later in 2003, during the ASEAN Summit in Bali, attended by both Vajpayee and Wen, Beijing had informed India about Sikkim's removal from the Chinese Foreign Ministry's website.

This was a significant step as it meant China no longer regarded Sikkim as a 'separate country'.

Sikkim became India's 22nd state in 1975 and merged with the Indian Union after a referendum overwhelmingly supported the move. But China, which took over Tibet in 1959 and regarded Sikkim as a part of Tibet, alleged the merger was an 'annexation'.

The two countries went to war in 1962 on the boundary issue.

India and China now agree that Sikkim 'has ceased to be an issue' in bilateral ties.

PTI
 
other sources:
 
 
http://www.irna.ir/en/news/view/line-20/0512276828111743.htm (apparently from this link it was reported back in Dec 05 )


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