RxPG News XML Feed for RxPG News   Add RxPG News Headlines to My Yahoo!  

Medical Research Health Special Topics World
 
  Home
 
 Careers 
 Dental
 Medical
 Nursing
 
 Latest Research 
 Aging
 Anaethesia
 Biochemistry
 Biotechnology
 Cancer
 Cardiology
 Clinical Trials
 Cytology
 Dental
 Dermatology
 Embryology
 Endocrinology
 ENT
 Environment
 Gastroenterology
 Genetics
 Gynaecology
 Haematology
 Immunology
 Infectious Diseases
 Metabolism
 Microbiology
 Musculoskeletal
 Nephrology
 Neurosciences
 Obstetrics
 Ophthalmology
 Orthopedics
 Paediatrics
 Pathology
 Pharmacology
 Physiology
 Psychiatry
 Public Health
 Radiology
 Rheumatology
 Surgery
 Urology
 Alternative Medicine
 Medicine
 Epidemiology
 Sports Medicine
 Toxicology
 
 Medical News 
 Awards & Prizes
 Epidemics
 Health
 Healthcare
 Launch
 Opinion
 Professionals
 
 Special Topics 
 Ethics
 Euthanasia
 Evolution
 Feature
 Odd Medical News
 Climate
  India Business
  India Culture
  India Diaspora
  India Education
  India Entertainment
  India Features
  India Lifestyle
  India Politics
  India Sci-Tech
  India Sports
  India Travel
 
 DocIndia 
 Reservation Issue
 Overseas Indian Doctor

Last Updated: May 14, 2007 - 10:29:22 AM
Report
India Channel

subscribe to India newsletter

   EMAIL   |   PRINT
Arunachal legislator remembers 1962 as Hu arrives in India
Nov 20, 2006 - 6:36:09 PM , Reviewed by: Priya Saxena
The India-China border along Arunachal Pradesh is separated by the McMohan Line, an imaginary border now known as the Line of Actual Control (LAC).

Article options
 Email to a Friend
 Printer friendly version
 India channel RSS
 More India news
[RxPG] Itanagar, Nov 20 (IANS) As a five-year-old boy in 1962, Tsewang Dhondup remembers being initially excited hearing the staccato gunshots fired by the rampaging Chinese army in the dizzy heights of Tawang in Arunachal Pradesh. But that excitement soon turned into fear, recalls Dhondup, now a ruling Congress legislator.

'I was first happy hearing gunshots, but then we realised that all was not well. I remember crying loudly out of fear,' Dhondup told IANS with a hint of anger in his face.

Tawang, perched at an altitude of about 10,200 feet, literally turned into a battlefront with Chinese soldiers overrunning Indian border posts by surprise. The Chinese managed to reach Bhalukpong, just 50 km from the garrison town of Tezpur in Assam.

'Our family fled our home riding on pony backs and reached Bhutan. We then came to Udalguri in Assam and stayed there for about two months,' Dhondhup recalls. And when on Nov 20, 1962, the Chinese called a unilateral ceasefire, people like Dhondhup trudged back home.

'We went on foot from Udalguri back to our village and found there was nothing left -- our homes were destroyed, belongings taken away by the Chinese,' Dhondhup, now the MLA from Tawang in the Arunachal Pradesh legislature, said.

Forty-four-years after the Chinese left the Indian soil Dhondhup is today again a worried man with claims by Beijing that Arunachal Pradesh belongs to them.

Chinese Ambassador to India Sun Yuxi told the CNN-IBN news channel last week that 'the whole of what you call the state of Arunachal Pradesh is the Chinese territory. ... We are claiming the whole of that'.

'We are more secured now then 1962, but we want that New Delhi should make it explicitly clear that Arunachal Pradesh is not a disputed area and that it belongs very much to India,' the 49-year-old Buddhist legislator said.

The controversy has put Arunachal Pradesh in the spotlight as Chinese President Hu Jintao arrives in New Delhi Monday evening for a four-day visit.

A team of about eight legislators representing constituencies close to China's Tibet region is camping in New Delhi to pressurise the Indian government to take up the issue with the Chinese president.

'It is in the greater interest of India that New Delhi should raise the issue and tell Hu that Arunachal Pradesh was never a part of China and such statements should never be made in future,' Congress MP from the state Nabam Rebia told IANS.

Lawmakers cutting across party lines have protested the Chinese claims.

'If need be we are ready to shed blood,' a senior Bharatiya Janata Party leader said.

The mountainous state of Arunachal Pradesh shares a 1,030 km unfenced border with China.

The India-China border along Arunachal Pradesh is separated by the McMohan Line, an imaginary border now known as the Line of Actual Control (LAC).

The border dispute with China was inherited by India from British colonial rulers, who hosted a 1914 conference with the Tibetan and Chinese governments that set the border in what is now Arunachal Pradesh. China has never recognised the 1914 boundary, known as the McMahon Line, and claims 90,000 sq km -- nearly all of Arunachal Pradesh.





Related India News
Apex court approves stringent anti-ragging measures
Podbharti.com, music to the ears of Hindi web community
Probe into official connivance in Munnar encroachments
DMK's Radhika Selvi: from gangster's widow to minister
Assam seeks 4,000 troopers as attacks cause panic
Take 'serious note' of BJP's communal designs, Sonia asks government
BJP MPs get Lok Sabha adjourned over Sethusamudram project
Gender and sexuality film festival touches a gamut of issues
Two militants killed in Kashmir
Now Budhia to walk from Bhubaneswar to Kolkata

Subscribe to India Newsletter
E-mail Address:

 Feedback
For any corrections of factual information, to contact the editors or to send any medical news or health news press releases, use feedback form

Top of Page

 
© All rights reserved 2004 onwards by RxPG Medical Solutions Private Limited
Contact Us