Arunachal Pradesh Chief Minister Pema Khandu has stated that no Indian state, together with Arunachal, shares a border immediately with China. Khandu stated that Indian states share a border with Tibet and never China. Nevertheless, he added that the forceful occupation of Tibet by China can’t be denied. This comes days after China expressed willingness to debate the border challenge, together with delimitation with India.
Chatting with PTI throughout an interview, the Arunachal CM stated that India shares a border with Tibet solely. CM Khandu stated that China forcibly occupied Tibet in 1950 and the Chinese language management over Tibet can’t be dominated out. The CM added that Arunachal Pradesh shares three worldwide boundaries – roughly 100kms with Bhutan, round 1,200 kms with Tibet and 550 kms with Myanmar.
India-China Border Dispute
India and China have been locked in a long-standing border dispute with Beijing claiming Indian land as their very own. The 2 nations have established a Particular Representatives (SRs) mechanism to resolve the border dispute. Recenly, Chinese language International Ministry spokesperson Mao Ning stated that China is able to focus on delimitation negotiation and border administration with India to maintain the border areas peaceable and tranquil.
Khandu additionally praised Dalai Lama and urged the Authorities to confer Bharat Ratna to the Tibetian chief in exile.
Chinese language Dam On Brahmaputra
Speaking concerning the Chinese language dam over Brahamputra river, Arunchal CM Khandu stated that it has been a priority for the state and the nation as nicely. He stated that the mega dam being constructed by China close to the border of Arunachal Pradesh will likely be a ticking ‘water bomb’. He stated that it may show to be an existential menace extra harmful than Chinese language navy.
Whereas chatting with PTI, Pema Khandu expressed critical concern over the development of the world’s largest dam on the Yarlung Tsangpo river—recognized in India because the Brahmaputra—highlighting that China’s refusal to signal worldwide water treaties means it isn’t sure by world norms. Khandu underscored that China can’t be trusted because the nation has been unpredictable.