CHINA
DISREGARDING HISTORIC COMMITMENTS ON NAKU LA
The skirmishes and the stand-off between
Indian and Chinese troops at Naku La in Sikkim last month
Sikkim-Tibet Convention of 1890 as proof of
India’s ownership of the territory
The Gazetteer of Sikkim in 1894, while describing
the physical features of Sikkim, also mentions the boundary that runs along
Naku la-Chorten Nyima La
Meetings between former Prime Minister Atal
Bihari Vajpayee and Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao in 2003 and maps exchanged
subsequently indicated that India recognised the Tibetan Autonomous Region as a
part of China, and Beijing recognised Sikkim as a State of the Indian Union
The Convention of Calcutta treaty
between the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland and the ruling Chinese Qing dynasty
relating to Tibet
and the north Indian Kingdom of Sikkim
Signed by Viceroy of India Lord Lansdowne and the Chinese Amban or resident in Tibet, Sheng Tai on 17 March
1890 in Calcutta,
India
British imperative in North
East India was to open the markets of Tibet and by extension China to their
manufactured textiles, tobacco, grain, tools and tea
British considered it to
create a buffer zone north of their Indian empire to prevent incursion by the
Russians
Protocol was added to the
original convention in December 1893. "Regulations Regarding Trade,
Communications , and Pasturage to Be Appended to the Sikkim-Tibet Convention of
1890" allowed for the establishment of a British trading post in Yatong,
Tibet as well as laid down regulations concerning pasturage and communication.
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