Charding Nullah Lhari stream | |
---|---|
Nickname(s) | Demchok River |
Location | |
country | India, China |
region | Jammu and Kashmir, Tibet Autonomous Region |
province | Ladakh, Ngari Prefecture |
district | Leh, Gar |
subdistrict | Nyoma, Zhaxigang |
Physical characteristics | |
Source | |
• location | Charding La |
• coordinates | 32°33′26″N 79°23′02″E / 32.5573°N 79.3838°E |
• elevation | 5,170 m (16,960 ft) |
Mouth | Indus River |
• location | Demchok |
• coordinates | 32°42′N 79°28′E / 32.700°N 79.467°E |
• elevation | 4,200 m (13,800 ft) |
Basin features | |
River system | Indus River |
Tributaries | |
• left | Nilu Nullah |
Charding Nullah (traditional name: Lhari stream, called Demchok River by China[1]) is a small river that serves as the de facto border between China and India in the disputed Demchok sector of Ladakh. Both India and China claim the disputed sector, and the river came to define the Line of Actual Control between the two nations. The river originates near the Charding La pass that is also on the border between the two countries and flows northeast to join the Indus River immediately to the south of the Demchok village.
A lost treaty between the Namgyal dynasty of Ladakh and Dzungar Khanate in 1684 may have mentioned the Lhari stream was mentioned by name as forming the boundary between the two regions. British surveys and maps produced in the 19th century placed the border between the princely state of Jammu and Kashmir roughly 10 miles (16 km) west of Demchok. After independence in 1947, the Republic of India claimed a border using the river up to 3 miles (4.8 km) east of Demchok, which has been contested by the People's Republic of China whose claims coincide with the British maps. The two countries fought a brief war in 1962, after which the Demchok region has remained divided between the two nations across a Line of Actual Control.
Etymology
The Indian government refers to the river as "Charding Nullah" after its place of origin, the Charding La pass. (A nullah is a mountain stream.)
The Chinese government uses the term "Demchok river" by the location of its mouth, near the Demchok village.[1]
The historical documents name the river as "Lhari stream".[2] Lhari (also spelt "Lahri" or "Lairi") is said to be the name of the rocky peak (4,865 m), at the foot which sits the village of Demchok.[3][4][a] Therefore, "Lhari stream" is identified with the Charding Nullah by the Indian government.[6][b]
Description
The Charding Nullah originates below the Charding La pass, which is on a large spur that divides the Sutlej river basin from the Indus river basin. In this area, the Sutlej river tributaries flow southeast into West Tibet and the Indus river and tributaries flow northwest, parallel to the Himalayan ranges.
The Charding nullah flows northeast along a narrow mountain valley. Halfway down the valley it is joined by another nullah from the left, called Nilu Nullah (or Nilung/Ninglung). The Charding–Nilu Nullah Junction (CNNJ, 4900 m) is recognised by both the Indian and Chinese border troops as a strategic point.[8]
The entire area surrounding the Charding nullah is referred to as the Changthang plateau. It consists of rocky mountain heights of Ladakh and Kailas ranges and sandy river valleys which are only good for grazing yaks, sheep and goats (the famous pashmina goats) reared by Changpa nomads.[9] The Indian-controlled northern side of the nullah has very few landmarks. The Chinese-controlled southern side has the village of Tashigang (Zhaxigang) with a historic monastery. At the end of Tibet–Ladakh–Mughal War, the Tibetan troops are said to have retreated to Tashigang where they fortified themselves.[10]
At the bottom of the valley, the Charding nullah branches into a 2 km-wide delta as it joins the Indus river.[11] The Indian Demchok village is to the north of the delta. There might have been a traditional Tibetan village to the south of the delta.[c] Prior to the Sino-Indian War of 1962, India had established a border post to the south of the delta (the "New Demchok post"). As the war progressed, the post was evacuated and the Chinese forces occupied it.[13][4] Subsequently, the Chinese established a new village at the southern location, whose name is spelt Dêmqog. Travel writer Romesh Bhattacharji states that it was established as a trading village for trade with Ladakh, but India never renewed trade after the war. He states that the southern Dêmqog village has only commercial buildings whereas the northern village has security-related buildings.[14]
Both the Indians and the Chinese have track roads going up the valley on the two sides of the nullah, reaching up to the CNNJ. Occasional stand-offs between the two forces at CNNJ are reported in the newspapers.[15]
History
Treaty of Tingmosgang (1684)
The chronicles of Ladakh mention that, at the conclusion of the Tibet–Ladakh–Mughal War in 1684, Tibet and Ladakh agreed on the Treaty of Tingmosgang, by which the extensive territories in West Tibet (Ngari) previously enjoyed by Ladakh were removed from its control. Ladakh was reduced to approximately its present extent. The treaty, whose text no longer survives, is assumed to have placed the frontier of Ladakh with Tibet at the "Lha-ri stream at Demchok".[16][17]: 41 Most sources agree that this border involved cession of territory for Ladakh. Ladakh had earlier annexed the entire West Tibet under its ruler Sengge Namgyal (r. 1624–1642).[18] The reduction of Ladakh was in effect a retaliation by Lhasa. The traditional border between the two regions prior to these conflicts is not clearly known.[d]
Roughly 160 years after the Treaty of Tingmosgang, Ladakh came under the rule of the Dogras, who launched an invasion into the West Tibet leading to the Dogra–Tibetan War. The war ended in a stalemate. The resulting Treaty of Chushul in 1842 bound the parties to "old, established frontiers", which were left unspecified.[19]
British boundary commission (1846–1847)
After the Dogras joined the British suzerainty as the state of Jammu and Kashmir, the British government dispatched a boundary commission to define the borders of the state with Tibet in 1846–1847. The Chinese government was invited to join the effort for a mutually agreed border. However the Chinese declined, stating that the frontier was well-known and it did not need a new definition.[20] The British boundary commission under Henry Strachey nevertheless surveyed the area. Its report stated:
'[Demchok] is a hamlet of half a dozen huts and tents, not permanently inhabited, divided by a rivulet (entering the left bank of the Indus) which constitutes the boundary of this quarter between Gnari ... [in Tibet] ... and Ladakh.[21]
The "rivulet" is evidently the Charding nullah. The Tibetan frontier guards prohibited the commission from proceeding beyond the rivulet.[21]
The commission placed the border on Indus at Demchok, and on the east followed a mountain watershed of the Indus passing through the Jara La and Chang La passes.[22]
Kashmir Atlas (1868)
Between 1847 and 1864, the British Indian government conducted a 'Kashmir Survey' and published its results in the Kashmir Atlas of 1868. This involved several adjustments to the boundary, including in the Demchok sector. Scholar Alastair Lamb states:
Where Strachey had put the boundary actually at Demchok, the Kashmir Atlas (Sheet 17) put it about sixteen miles downstream on the Indus from Demchok, thus coming nearer to the [present] Chinese than the Indian claim line.[23]
Lamb interprets this as a "compromise". According to him, the British gave up territory in Demchok to include other territory near the Spanggur Lake.[24][e]
In reality, the British knowledge of Ladakh was quite limited at this early stage. Maharaja Gulab Singh was zealous of his independence and the British distrusted his "expansionist" tendencies. Indian commentators state that the revenue records from the very period of the survey show that the Demchok area was administered by Ladakh. This information did not apparently filter down to the survey team.[26][27]
Post-1868 maps
Subsequent to the Kashmir Atlas of 1868, the British gained much knowledge of Ladakh. Frederic Drew entered the service of Kashmir as a geologist in 1862, publishing his seminal work Jammoo and Kashmir Territories in 1875. The Ladakhi chronicles were discovered by a Moravian missionary named Karl Marx in 1880s and its text was published in the Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal between 1891 and 1902.[28]
The majority of British maps published between 1918 and 1947, as well as a compromise border offered in a British note to the Chinese government in 1899, showed both Demchok and Khurnak as being in Tibet.[17]: 39 Historian Alastair Lamb wrote that "In the Demchak region the British line followed a course very close to that of the present Chinese claim."[17]: 39
On the ground, the traditional boundaries continued to be followed. The Kashmir government disregarded the British maps and the Tibetan claims to Demchok seem to have persisted.[f] Alastair Lamb states, "by the time of the Transfer of Power in 1947 nothing had been settled."[30]
Modern claims
In 1959, then-Prime Minister of India Jawaharlal Nehru quoted the British note to China of 1899 as evidence for the Indian claims to Aksai Chin and the Demchok sector.[17]: 39 However, Lamb stated that "Far from supporting the present Indian claim, the 1899 note outlines a boundary which would almost exactly partition the disputed Aksai Chin area and hand to China some 7,000 square miles (estimated) of territory which India now claims."[17]: 39
Since the 1950s, Indian maps do not agree entirely with either the 1846–1847 survey or the 1868 Kashmir Atlas; the Indian claims lie 3 miles (4.8 km) east of Demchok whereas the British maps showed the border to be 10 miles (16 km) west of Demchok.[17]: 48 The Chinese claims coincide with British surveys that placed the border 10 miles (16 km) west of Demchok.[17]: 39, 48
Notes
- ^ "Lha-ri" means "soul mountain" in Tibetan.[5] The Lhari peak might have had religious significance.
- ^ Fisher et al. states that the Lhari stream flows "five miles southeast of Demchok".[7] This seems incorrect. Rather the Indian alignment of the border is five miles southeast of Demchok. It follows the watershed of the Lhari stream/Charding Nullah. See Indian Report, Part 1 (1962, Q21 (p. 38))
- ^ A report by the Governor of Ladakh in 1904–05 stated: "I visited Demchok on the boundary with Lhasa. ... A nullah falls into the Indus river from the south-west and it (Demchok) is situated at the junction of the river. Across is the boundary of Lhasa, where there are 8 to 9 huts of the Lhasa zamindars. On this side there are only two zamindars."[12]
- ^ A. H. Francke, who first studied the history of West Tibet believed that, when the West Tibetan kingdom of Kyide Nyimagon was divided among his three sons c. 930, the borders of Ladakh (then called Maryul) stretched up to the Sengge Zangbo river valley. This is contested by other historians. It is unlikely that the borders remained unchanged up to the 17th century.
- ^ The idea of "compromise" seems to contradict other observation of Lamb regarding the virtues of the survey, e.g., "Henry Strachey, and the Kashmir surveyors, like Godwin Austen, made careful inquiries as to the whereabouts of the traditional boundary". (emphasis added.)[25]
- ^ Claude Arpi narrates the description of a murder inquiry in 1939, conducted by the British Trade Agent in Gartok and the governor of Ladakh (wazir-e-wazarat) jointly with the Tibetan officials (garpons). The Indian officials travelled from Leh to Demchok for this purpose, where they camped at the Lhari stream, described as "a natural boundary between Tibet and Kashmir at Demchok".[29]
References
- ^ a b Chinese government communication: "The Indian Government alleges that Chinese troops moved forward up to so-called Charding Nullah in the eastern part of Demchok. In fact, it was Indian troops who on September 18, intruded into the vicinity of the Demchok village ... after crossing the Demchok River from Parigas ..." (Indian Government White Paper XII (January 1965 - February 1966))
- ^ Fisher, Rose & Huttenback, Himalayan Battleground (1963), p. 107.
- ^ Handa, Buddhist Western Himalaya (2001), p. 160; Bhattacharji, Ladakh (2012), Chapter 9: "Changthang: The High Plateau"
- ^ a b Claude Arpi, The Case of Demchok, Indian Defence Review, 19 May 2017.
- ^ McKay, Alex (2015), Kailas Histories: Renunciate Traditions and the Construction of Himalayan Sacred Geography, BRILL, p. 520, ISBN 978-90-04-30618-9
- ^ Indian Report, Part 2 (1962), pp. 47–48: "There was only one Lhari in the area, and that was the stream joining the Indus near Demchok at Longitude 79° 28' E and Latitude 32° 42' N."
- ^ Fisher, Rose & Huttenback, Himalayan Battleground (1963), p. 39.
- ^ Chinese troops cross LAC in Ladakh again, India Today, 16 July 2014.
- ^ Ahmed, Monisha (2004), "The Politics of Pashmina: The Changpas of Eastern Ladakh", Nomadic Peoples – New Series, 8 (2), White Horse Press: 89–106, JSTOR 43123726
- ^ Handa, Buddhist Western Himalaya (2001), p. 156.
- ^ Claude Arpi, Demchok and the New Silk Road: China's double standard, Indian Defence Review, 4 April 2015. "View of the nalla" image.
- ^ Indian Report, Part 3 (1962), pp. 3–4.
- ^ Cheema, Crimson Chinar (2015), p. 190.
- ^ Bhattacharji, Ladakh (2012), Chapter 9: "Changthang: The High Plateau".
- ^ India, China admit to intrusion by Chinese herdsmen, Gulf News, 28 July 2014.
- ^ Emmer, the Tibet-Ladakh-Mughal War (2007), pp. 99–100.
- ^ a b c d e f g Lamb, Alastair (1965). "Treaties, Maps and the Western Sector of the Sino-Indian Boundary Dispute" (PDF). The Australian Year Book of International Law. 1 (1): 37–52.
- ^ Howard & Howard, Historic Ruins in the Gya Valley (2014), p. 90.
- ^ Fisher, Rose & Huttenback, Himalayan Battleground (1963), p. 55–56.
- ^ Lamb, The China-India border (1964), pp. 64–66.
- ^ a b Lamb, The China-India border (1964), p. 68.
- ^ Maxwell, India's China War 970, map opposite p. 40.
- ^ Lamb, The China-India border (1964), pp. 72–73.
- ^ Lamb, The China-India border (1964), p. 173.
- ^ Lamb, The China-India border (1964), p. 42.
- ^ Rao, The India-China Border (1968):
- p.24: "But such an evaluation was seldom done and although most officials traced the boundary correctly along the watershed range running parallel to the river Indus, gross blunders were committed regarding the alignment in the Pangong and Demchok areas. This was apparently due to the unfamiliarity of some of the British officials with the traditional and treaty basis of the boundary and to their mistaking local disputes such as pasture disputes with boundary disputes."
- p.29: "The Kashmir Atlas boundary conflicts also with the first-hand evidence provided by the 1847 Commission. In regard to Demchok, it conflicts with well-established facts of history and with revenue records for the very period that the survey was conducted."
- ^ Bray, The Lapchak Mission (1990), p. 75: "Many of these relationships had their origin in the distant past, and the British at first understood their full significance imperfectly, or not at all."
- ^ Bray, The Lapchak Mission (1990), p. 77.
- ^ Claude Arpi, The curious case of Demchok, The Pioneer, 16 August 2018.
- ^ Lamb, Tibet, China & India (1989), p. 360.
Bibliography
- India, Ministry of External Affairs (1962), Report of the Officials of the Governments of India and the People's Republic of China on the Boundary Question, Government of India Press
- Bhattacharji, Romesh (2012), Ladakh: Changing, Yet Unchanged, New Delhi: Rupa Publications – via Academia.edu
- Bray, John (Winter 1990), "The Lapchak Mission From Ladakh to Lhasa in British Indian Foreign Policy", The Tibet Journal, 15 (4): 75–96, JSTOR 43300375
- Cheema, Brig Amar (2015), The Crimson Chinar: The Kashmir Conflict: A Politico Military Perspective, Lancer Publishers, pp. 51–, ISBN 978-81-7062-301-4
- Emmer, Gerhard (2007), "Dga' Ldan Tshe Dbang Dpal Bzang Po and the Tibet-Ladakh-Mughal War of 1679-84", Proceedings of the Tenth Seminar of the IATS, 2003. Volume 9: The Mongolia-Tibet Interface: Opening New Research Terrains in Inner Asia, BRILL, pp. 81–108, ISBN 978-90-474-2171-9
- Fisher, Margaret W.; Rose, Leo E.; Huttenback, Robert A. (1963), Himalayan Battleground: Sino-Indian Rivalry in Ladakh, Praeger – via Questia
- Handa, O. C. (2001), Buddhist Western Himalaya: A Politico-Religious History, Indus Publishing Company, ISBN 978-81-7387-124-5
- Howard, Neil; Howard, Kath (2014), "Historic Ruins in the Gya Valley, Eastern Ladakh, and a Consideration of Their Relationship to the History of Ladakh and Maryul", in Lo Bue, Erberto; Bray, John (eds.), Art and Architecture in Ladakh: Cross-cultural Transmissions in the Himalayas and Karakoram, pp. 68–99
- Lamb, Alastair (1964), The China-India border, Oxford University Press
- Lamb, Alastair (1989), Tibet, China & India, 1914-1950: a history of imperial diplomacy, Roxford Books
- Maxwell, Neville (1970), India's China War, Pantheon Books, ISBN 978-0-394-47051-1
- Rao, Gondker Narayana (1968), The India-China Border: A Reappraisal, Asia Publishing House
External links
- Demchok Eastern Sector on OpenStreetMap (Chinese-controlled)
- Demchok Western Sector on OpenStreetMap (Indian-controlled)