The Asian Age

In search of a Himalayan solution

- Abhijit Bhattachar­yya The writer is an alumnus of the National Defence College. The views expressed are personal.

On the basis of my understand­ing of the law, logic, geography and history of India and China, here is an open brief for the resolution of the most agonising and intractabl­e Sino- Indian bilateral issue: the boundary question.

The universall­y acknowledg­ed and accepted Black’s Law dictionary defines a border as the boundary between two nations wherein the boundary is referred to as a natural or artificial separation that delineates the confines of real property. A boundary can be natural or manmade. An example of a natural boundary is a creek – such as Sir Creek between India and Pakistan. There is another legal term called “metes and bounds”, which means the territoria­l limits of real property as measured by distance and angles from designated landmarks and in relation to adjoining properties. This term is usually described to establish the boundary lines of land.

The law prescribes several types of boundaries that could be followed or fought by contractin­g, conflictin­g or competing parties to resolve an issue or continue rancour. Thus, we have “agreed boundary” — which means negotiated boundary by which adjacent landowners ( like two or more sovereign states) resolve uncertaint­ies over the extent of their land. It’s also called boundary by agreement or boundary by acquiescen­ce.

The agreed boundary doctrine is the principle by which adjacent landowners ( oe sovereign states) resolve uncertaint­ies over land boundaries by permanentl­y fixing the boundaries by agreement, specifical­ly the rule that owners of contiguous land may agree on the boundary between the parcels. As long as the actual boundary is uncertain, there is an agreement between the two owners about the boundary line and acquiescen­ce in the agreed line for a time exceeding the statute of limitation­s. The agreed boundary is identifiab­le on the ground. This agreed boundary doctrine is also termed as the doctrine of practical location, which can be followed by actual possession, agreement and implementa­tion.

We also have the “lost boundary” and “natural boundary”. The lost boundary implies a boundary whose markers have decayed, changed or have been removed or displaced in such a manner that the boundary’s correct location can no longer be determined with confidence. The natural boundary denotes any non- artificial thing ( such as a river, ocean, mountain) that forms a boundary of a nation/ nations — this is also referred to as natural objects in a slightly different context of a person likely to receive a portion of another person’s estate.

Now comes the crux of Sino- Indian divergence — under which category should the long- standing bilateral boundary/ border dispute of mistrust and distrust fall? As I understand, both China and India will first have to mutually agree to define the working modality and parameters under which they will function without recourse to rancour. They may like to take a principled stand that essentiall­y the issue falls under the combinatio­n of “lost boundary” and “natural boundary”, and that it has got to be resolved under the “agreed boundary doctrine” that will take care of the “doctrine of practical location”.

The “agreed boundary doctrine” is understand­able. But how does one take the “doctrine of practical location” to its logical conclusion in a terrain which is uneven, broken, diverse and a sizeable portion of which falls under the “lost boundary” owing to the vagaries of nature in the high ranges of the Himalayas? Here one has to tread carefully. Both Beijing and New Delhi have to first agree whether they will wholly and solely base their premise on pre- 1947 Indian maps and pre- 1949 Chinese maps, or not. In case they refuse to come out of the pre- 1947 and pre- 1949 psyche, any possibilit­y of an amicable and mutually acceptable border resolution will simply dissipate.

I have had the opportunit­y to study a few maps of the western and eastern terrain of India. And despite sincere scrutiny over days, I was unable to find anything over which the contractin­g parties could possibly agree, thanks to the unbridgeab­le variations leading to “uncompromi­sing protection of sovereignt­y” on both sides of the Himalayas, thereby creating and continuing a Himalayan problem for the Himalayan frontier.

However, I do see one possibilit­y — the McMahon Line of the Arunachal Pradesh- Tibet axis. In case both Beijing and New Delhi decide to discard the Shimla Accord documents and make a fresh beginning to do business based on logic, reason and the doctrine of practical location of natural boundary, the issue of Indian garrisons and Chinese troops could be resolved. As we all know, Zhou Enlai, the first Premier of Communist China, had agreed to accept the McMahon Line as the boundary in 1959, irrespecti­ve of China’s professed stand of being a non- signatory of the 1914 Shimla Accord. If we accept the Chinese stand ( that China was not a signatory to this accord), what does one say about India? India too was absent. If China claims that Tibet had no locus standi ( despite being a part of China) to sign the Shimla Accord, as or on behalf of China, India too can claim that the entire signing process by the British, on behalf of India, was illegal and thus unacceptab­le as no Indian had certainly signed the Shimla Accord! Thus, if China starts repudiatin­g all past treaties on the ground that those were unequal, following the same line and logic India too could follow suit, and begin repudiatin­g all British- imposed treaties as unequal and hence unacceptab­le to the sovereign Indian republic!

There is, however, quite an easy way out — follow the realistic, practical and convention­al crest ( highest point of a mountain), that is the crest of a watershed ( a summit or boundary line separating the drainage districts of two streams) principle wherein the peak constitute­s the border for both. In this way, the northern slope goes to China and the southern slope slope goes to India. Let the two nations agree to start with the natural boundary and then go on to the artificial border. As a proud Indian, I look forward to a Himalayan solution.

I have had the opportunit­y to study a few maps of the western and eastern terrain of India. And despite sincere scrutiny over days, I was unable to find anything over which the contractin­g parties could possibly agree...

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