Source: http://www.claudearpi.net/the-sino-indian-boundary-issue
Timestamp: 2018-02-24 15:29:15
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The Sino-Indian Boundary Issue ‹ Claude Arpi
Historical Documents / December 11, 2016
The boundary issue between China and India has played an important role in the bilateral relations, though before 1950, only a India-Tibet border existed.
1914 Proceedings of the Simla Conference (Third Meeting)
Correspondence Nehru-Zhou Enlai (November 1959 – March 1960)
Correspondence between the Prime Minister of India and the Premier of the People’s Republic of China
November 1959 – March 1960
Published by the Publication Division of the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting in 1963
1963 Chinese Aggression in Maps
Ten Maps, with an Introduction and Explanatory Notes
The Sino-Indian Boundary Question and International-Law
A study by K. Krishna Rao published in the International and Comparative Law Quarterly
Report of the Officials – Part 1 (1961)
Report of the Officials – Part 2 (1961)
Report of the Officials – Part 3 (1961)
Report of the Officials – Part 4 (1961)
Report of the Officials on the Boundary (1961) – Chinese Report Part 1
The Sino-Indian boundary has never been formally delimited and there is only a traditional customary boundary line between the two countries. The location and terrain features of this traditional customary boundary line are now described as follows in three sectors, western, middle and eastern. The western sector refers to the section of the boundary linking Sinkiang and Tibet of China with Ladakh; the middle sector, the section of the boundary between China’s Tibet on the one hand and India’s Punjab, Himachal and Uttar Pradesh on the other; and the eastern sector, the section of the Sino-Indian boundary east of Bhutan.
Report of the Officials on the Boundary (1961) – Chinese Report Part 2
CONCERNING TRADITION AND CUSTOM – POSITIVE STATEMENT
Report of the Officials on the Boundary (1961) – Chinese Report Part 3
COMMENTS ON TRADITION AND CUSTOM
PART 1: COMMENTS ON THE POSITIVE STATEMENT OF THE INDIAN SIDE
President Rajendra Prasad’s address to Parliament – 8 February 1960
Foreword by GB Pant to India-China Border Problem – March 1960
Morarji Desai’s discussions with Chou En-lai – April 1960
Finance Minister Morarji Desai’s discussions with Chou En-lai, April 1960 (Extract)
When nobody supported China, India took your side and put up your case in the United Nations and forged friendship with you. You accepted the principles of Panchasheela. India accepted your sovereignty over Tibet, but you had accepted the condition that Tibet’s autonomy would be respected and that you would not interfere with it.
Joint communiqué of the Prime Ministers of India and China – April 25, 1960
At the invitation of the Prime Minister of India, Shri Jawaharlal; Nehru, His Excellency Mr. Chou En-lai, Premier of the State Council of the People’s Republic of China, arrived in Delhi on the 19th April to discuss certain differences relating to the border areas which have arisen between the Government of India and the Government of the People’s Republic of China.
His Excellency Mr. Chou En-lai was accompanied by His Excellency Marshal Chen Yi, Vice-Premier of the People’s Republic of China, His Excellency Mr. Chang Han-fu, Vice-Foreign Minister of China, and other officials of the Chinese’ Government.
Nehru’s statement in Lok Sabha – 26 April, 1960
Nehru’s statement in Rajya Sabha – 29 April, 1960
Ministry of External Affairs Annual Report for the Year 1959-60 – March 1960
Zhang Wenji-Parthasarathy talks – 1961
The India-Tibet Boundary becomes the Sino-Indian boundary Atlas of the Northern Frontier of India (Part 1) Published...