The Daily Telegraph

Outrage after China land grab in Nepal

Re-routing of rivers and night-time raids could lead to heightened aggression along border, officials fear

- By Joe Wallen in New Delhi and Sophia Yan in Beijing

CHINA has annexed more than 150 hectares of Nepal, politician­s from the tiny Himalayan nation have told The Daily Telegraph, months after deadly border clashes between Chinese and Indian troops.

China allegedly began seizing Nepalese land in five frontier districts in May, sending members of its People’s Liberation Army ( PLA) across undefended areas of the border.

In the north-western district of Humla, PLA troops crossed the border into the Limi Valley and Hilsa, moving stone pillars which had previously demarcated the boundary further into Nepalese territory before constructi­ng alleged military bases. The Daily Telegraph has seen images of the bases.

PLA soldiers also allegedly moved border pillars further into Nepalese territory in the district of Gorkha.

Further annexation­s occurred in the Rasuwa, Sindhupalc­howk and Sankhuwasa­bha districts, after Chinese engineers in the Tibet Autonomous Region diverted the flow of rivers acting as a natural boundary and claimed the previously submerged Nepalese territory.

“Why should China come over into Nepal, when China is already 60 times the size of our small country?” said Jeevan Bahadur Shahi, a lawmaker in the Nepali Congress Party.

Neither Kathmandu nor Beijing responded to requests for comment, with Nepalese politician­s accusing their government of staying silent for fear of angering their most important trading partner and regional ally.

China has pursued a more aggressive foreign policy under President Xi Jinping, whose signature Belt and Road project aims to construct trade and transport links from the country across Asia and into Europe.

But alongside the infrastruc­ture deals, Beijing has been accused of muscling in on neighbours’ territory. In June, Chinese troops seized at least 37 square miles of Indian territory in Ladakh. The clashes that followed saw 20 Indian troops die of reported clubbing and rock-throwing.

The alleged land-grabs in Humla appear to have been motivated by the strategic view the district’s mountain peaks have over the Himalayas, according to Nepalese politician­s.

In 2009, Chinese troops first crossed over into the undefended district and constructe­d a veterinary centre for livestock. When Mr Shahi objected, he was told by the Nepalese government the building would have a positive impact on the livelihood­s of impoverish­ed local residents who typically make a living by herding yak and goats.

He says he received telephone calls from local villagers in June, reporting stone pillars marking the undefended border had been moved further inside Nepalese territory in the Limi Valley by Chinese troops.

Around 30 hectares of Nepalese territory have been seized in the Limi Valley during this recent incursion, with Chinese troops constructi­ng an additional nine buildings, including military bases, according to Mr Shahi. He says China annexed more land in the Humla district in June taking the total allegedly seized in these districts to 70 hectares.

“The local people are very scared, particular­ly because they previously depended on Chinese traders to buy commoditie­s like rice, bread and salt,” says Mr Shahi. “They are worried that if they raise their voices on the issue then it will disturb everything for them.”

In the first week of May, the 72 households of the remote mountainou­s village of Rui awoke to find the border pillar that separated them from China had been moved overnight, meaning they had been incorporat­ed into the Tibet Autonomous Region, according to Rakesh Kumar Mishra, a committee member of the opposition Janta Samajh Party. Mr Mishra says around 60 hectares of land were annexed.

Mr Mishra and Mr Shahi both accuse the Nepalese government of inaction.

In June, a report published by the Nepalese Surveying and Mapping Department, which claimed China had purposeful­ly altered the course of rivers acting as a natural border with Nepal to claim 33 hectares of land, was dismissed by Nepalese government sources.

Nepal is currently ruled by the Nepal Communist Party, which sees the Communist Party of China as an ideologica­l brother. China also contribute­s the majority of vital foreign direct investment into Nepal, which is one of Asia’s poorest nations.

Mr Shahi and Mr Mishra fear the annexation­s of Nepalese land are the beginning of heightened Chinese aggression along the border and say there will be no opposition unless the Nepalese Government takes a firmer stance.

‘Why should China come into Nepal, when China is already 60 times the size of our small country?’

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