Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Tawang tangle: Renaming places is China’s old ploy

Beijing has long mastered the system through which ‘legal claims’ are put forward to delegitimi­se adversarie­s

- MANOJ JOSHI Manoj Joshi is distinguis­hed fellow, Observer Research Foundation The views expressed are personal

True to form, the Chinese have pushed up their claim over Arunachal Pradesh to another level. The English daily Global Times said in a news item today that “China’s Ministry of Civil Affairs announced on April 14 that it had standardis­ed in Chinese characters, Tibetan and Roman alphabet, the names of six places in ‘South Tibet’, which India calls ‘Arunachal Pradesh’ in accordance with the regulation­s of the government.

So, Bum La, the pass that marks the Line of Actual Control (LAC) north of Tawang has become Bümo La and Namka Chu, through which the current LAC runs and where the fighting first began in October 1962, has become Namkapub Ri and Menchuka, a small town in West Siang district, has become Mainquka.

China has long mastered the art of “lawfare” or the system through which legal claims are put forward to delegitimi­se adversarie­s. Renaming places is not something new. So the Chinese call the Paracel Islands and Spratly Islands in the South China Sea as the Xisha and Nansha islands or the Senkaku islands which they dispute with Japan as the Diaoyu islands. So Aksai Chin which India claims as being part of Jammu & Kashmir is occupied by China and is said to be the south- western part of the Hotan Prefecture of Xinjiang.

India’s claim on Arunachal Pradesh rests on the Simla Convention of 1914 which it arrived at with the Tibetan authoritie­s which marked the border through what was known as the McMahon Line. The great monastery of Tawang thus became a part of India, though it was administer­ed by Tibetan monks till 1951 when an Indian patrol team led by Major R. Khating sent them away. China says that its representa­tive had not agreed to the Simla Convention, though the record says that he initialled it. Further in ensuring years, the Chinese authoritie­s did not raise any issue with regard to the McMahon Line.

Even though China claimed a boundary on the foothills of the Assam plains from the outset, it did not press its claims. In 1962, following the defeat of the Indian Army, China occupied all of Arunachal Pradesh, but voluntaril­y withdrew thereafter.

Indian negotiator­s have repeatedly told the Chinese that bringing up Tawang is a deal breaker.

Now, it is not just Tawang, clearly the Chinese are hardening their claim on the entire state of Arunachal Pradesh. And the prospects of a border settlement look remote. But this is not just something that affects India. Across their periphery, whether in the Senkaku/Diayou islands, or the South China Sea, China’s position on its borders has become more assertive and inflexible.

 ?? AP ?? The Dalai Lama waves to supporters in Arunachal Pradesh, April 6. The exiled Tibetan spiritual leader's visit to the state was a point of friction between India and China.
AP The Dalai Lama waves to supporters in Arunachal Pradesh, April 6. The exiled Tibetan spiritual leader's visit to the state was a point of friction between India and China.
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