Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

Last village before Doklam lives in shadow of IndiaChina row

- Probir Pramanik letters@hindustant­imes.com

KUPPUP, SIKKIM (INDO-CHINA BORDER) The hamlet at an altitude of 13,900 feet some 68 kilometres east of Gangtok betrays little sign of the tension brewing in its neighbourh­ood. The narrow hilly roads are deserted and most residents are indoors. But for the rustle of the icy cold winds , Kuppup is quiet and there is hardly any trace of activity.

All the action, however, is just seven kilometers away, at Doklam on the contested trijunctio­n of China, India and Bhutan.

It is here that India and China are engaged in a tense month-long standoff over a dispute triggered by Beijing’s claim over the territory. Both India and its ally Bhutan dispute the claim.

As the last Indian habitation high up in the Himalayas on the way to Doklam, Kuppup has a ringside view of the festering dispute. As tensions ratchet up on the internatio­nal border, residents of Kuppup — a hamlet of 200-odd tin-roofed huts — have decided to stay tight-lipped.

“There is enough trouble nearby. We don’t need more trouble,” says a 54-year-old housewife who runs a tea stall from her roadside home.

Overshadow­ed by giant peaks dotted with outposts of the Chinese army, Kuppup villagers are reminded of the Chinese presence even in normal times. Around a corner of the road leading to Doklam that is heavily patrolled by Indian troops of the 17 Mountain Division, a signboard reads: “Caution: Chinese observatio­n starts”.

Local officials have also told the villagers not to speak out of turn, particular­ly to any outsider adventurou­s enough to undertake the arduous, seven-kilometre trek to Kuppup from the Nathula border pass.

The media, in particular, is unwelcome.

“We have a magisteria­l order to detain media persons here,” explains a local Sikkim police official while escorting out this correspond­ent.

Locals are reluctant to narrate the sights and sounds they are witness to amid the expected troop buildup along the border. Many of men folk are engaged as porters for the Indian army while several work for the Garrison Reserve Engineerin­g Force (GREF) of the Border Roads Organisati­on that builds and maintains strategic border roads along the internatio­nal frontier. No one wants to earn the displeasur­e of the army.

Residents, however, do talk about a senior GREF official sacked from his job recently after he spoke to an outsider. They instead prefer to speak about how India-China border trade has taken a hit at Sherathang, some nine kilometers from Kuppup.

 ??  ?? At the corner of the road leading to Doklam, a signboard reads: “Caution: Chinese observatio­n start”. n COURTESY: WANG CHEN
At the corner of the road leading to Doklam, a signboard reads: “Caution: Chinese observatio­n start”. n COURTESY: WANG CHEN

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