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Demchok, Ladakh

Coordinates: 32°42′14″N 79°26′48″E / 32.7038°N 79.4467°E / 32.7038; 79.4467
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Demchok
ཌེམ་ཆོག
Village
Demchok is located in Ladakh
Demchok
Demchok
Location in Ladakh, India
Demchok is located in India
Demchok
Demchok
Demchok (India)
Coordinates: 32°42′14″N 79°26′48″E / 32.7038°N 79.4467°E / 32.7038; 79.4467
CountryIndia
Union TerritoryLadakh
DistrictLeh
TehsilNyoma
PanchayatKoyul
Government
 • SarpanchUgrain Chodon
Area
 • Total
33 ha (82 acres)
Elevation
4,200 m (13,800 ft)
Population
 (2011)
 • Total
78
 • Density240/km2 (610/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+5:30 (IST)
Census code906
[1][2]

Demchok (Tibetan: ཌེམ་ཆོག, Wylie: Demchog, historical: bDe-mChog),[a] also called Parigas by China,[6][b] is a village and military encampment in the Demchok sector disputed between India and China. It is administered as part of the Nyoma tehsil in the Leh district of Ladakh by India,[1][7] and claimed by China as part of the Tibet Autonomous Region.[8]

The Line of Actual Control (LAC) passes along the southeast side of the village, along the Charding Nullah (also called Demchok River and Lhari stream) which joins the Indus River near the village. Across the stream, less than a kilometre away, is a Chinese-administered Demchok village,[6] spelt Dêmqog in Tibetan pinyin.[9]

History

Map
About OpenStreetMaps
Maps: terms of use
8km
5miles
Chisumle
Chisumle
Umling La
Umling La
Jara La
Jara La
(Zhaxigang)
Charding La
Charding La
Koyul Lungpa river
Koyul
Nilu Nullah
Nilu
Nullah
Charding Nullah
Lhari stream /
Charding Nullah
Indus River
Indus River
Lhari peak
Lhari peak
Dêmqog, Ngari
Dêmqog–China
Dêmqog, Ngari
Demchok, Ladakh
Demchok–India
Demchok and vicinity

Demchok is a historic area of Ladakh, having been part of the kingdom from its inception in the 10th century. The description of the kingdom in the Ladakh Chronicles mentions Demchok Karpo, also called Demchok Lhari Karpo or Lhari Karpo,[10] as being part of the original kingdom.[11][12] This is a possible reference to the rocky white peak behind the present-day Demchok village.[13][14] [c] The Lhari peak is held sacred by Buddhists. Demchok (Sanskrit: Cakrasaṃvara) is the name of a Buddhist Tantric deity, who is believed to reside on the Mount Kailas, and whose imagery parallels that of Shiva in Hinduism.[17][18] The Lhari peak is also referred to as "Chota Kailas" (mini Kailas) and attracts pilgrimage from Hindus as well as Buddhists.[19][20] Tibetologist Nirmal C. Sinha states that Demchok is part of the Hemis complex.[21] Ruined houses belonging to the Hemis monastery were noticed by Sven Hedin in 1907,[22] and the monastery continues to own land in Demchok.[23]

The stream that flows beside the Lhari peak, referred to as the Lhari stream in historical documents ("Charding Nullah" or "Demchok River" in modern times), was set as the boundary between Ladakh and Tibet at the end of the Tibet–Ladakh–Mughal War in the 17th century.[24]

When Henry Strachey visited the area in 1847, he described Demchok as a "hamlet divided by a rivulet [the Lhari stream]", with settlements on both the sides of the stream. The stream was the prevailing border between Ladakh and Tibet.[25][26] A governor (wazir-e-wazarat) of Ladakh visited the area in 1904–05 and found the Tibetan Demchok village housing 8 to 9 huts of zamindars (landholders) while the Ladakhi Demchok village had only two zamindars.[27] When Sven Hedin visited the area in the November 1907, he described Demchok as four or five huts lying on the southeastern bank of the Lhari stream in Tibet, with the Ladakhi side of the Lhari stream only containing the pyramidal Lhari peak and the ruins of two or three houses.[28][22] According to the Indian government, the Ladakhi Demchok village was used for seasonal cutivation by nomadic farmers.[29]

When independent India defined its borders in 1954, it set its border five miles southeast of Ladakhi Demchok.[30] This would have made the Tibetan Demchok village a part of its territory. During the 1962 Sino-Indian War, the Chinese forces reclaimed the areas southeast of the Lhari stream. The Line of Actual Control resulting from the war runs along the Lhari stream.[d]

Geography

Demchok was on an old route linking Ladakh and Tibet along the bank of the Indus River,[32] which ran mostly through plains to Lake Manasarovar approximately 300 km away.[33]

The Line of Actual Control (LAC) passes along the southeast side of the village, following the Charding Nullah upstream from the nearby Indus River. The Chinese-administered village of Dêmqog, Ngari Prefecture is 600m away, across the stream.[9][34] The Indian-claimed border extends 3 miles (4.8 km) southeast of Demchok, while the Chinese-claimed border extends 10 miles (16 km) northwest of Demchok.[35]

Sino-Indian disputes

As of 2005, the route from Demchok to Lake Manasarovar in Tibet is closed and local trade with China is prohibited, although local residents admit that clandestine trade with China had been ongoing for decades.[32]

In April 2016, the Daily Excelsior reported that local discontent over Chinese army objections near the border resulted in demands for resettlement from Demchok.[36] Later in 2016, the Nubra constituency MLA Deldan Namgyal reported that the Chinese military suggested to the sarpanch of Demchok "to join China rather than [sit] with India" due to the infrastructural differences across the border.[36][37] Demchok residents protested after the Indian Army refused permission for the local residents to construct irrigation canals to avoid a reaction from Chinese army.[37]

In 2019, the sarpanch of Demchok said that residents of Demchok were moving to the town of Leh due to a lack of infrastructure and jobs.[38]

Demographics

Map including Demchok (Army Map Service, 1954)
Map showing disputed areas in Ladakh, including Demchok in southeast (CIA, 1988)

Demchok had 31 households and a population of 78 according to the 2011 Census of India. The effective literacy rate (i.e. the literacy rate of population excluding children aged 6 and below) is 42.47%.[39] According to the sarpanch of Demchok in 2019, the village had a population of 69 people who are mostly nomads.[38]

Demographics (2011 Census)[39]
Total Male Female
Population 78 43 35
Children aged below 6 years 5 4 1
Scheduled caste 1 1 0
Scheduled tribe 64 37 27
Literates 31 20 11
Workers (all) 51 27 24
Main workers (total) 49 26 23
Main workers: Cultivators 5 5 0
Main workers: Agricultural labourers 0 0 0
Main workers: Household industry workers 2 0 2
Main workers: Other 42 21 21
Marginal workers (total) 2 1 1
Marginal workers: Cultivators 0 0 0
Marginal workers: Agricultural labourers 0 0 0
Marginal workers: Household industry workers 0 0 0
Marginal workers: Others 2 1 1
Non-workers 27 16 11

Infrastructure

There has been a traditional road between Fukche and Demchok, which connects Demchok to Koyul, Dungti and beyond, but the road is in poor condition.[32] Attempts to improve the road in the past are said to have raised objections from China.[40]

A new road from Chisumle in the Koyul Lungpa valley to Demchok was constructed by the Border Roads Organisation in 2017, via the Umling La pass (32°41′47″N 79°17′03″E / 32.6964°N 79.2842°E / 32.6964; 79.2842) at a height of 19,300 ft (5,900 m). It is billed as the "world's highest motorable road".[41][42]

Demchok is on the list to receive mobile phone connectivity from Jio under the Universal Service Obligation Funding (USOF) programme.[43]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ For the traditional spelling see Francke, Antiquities of Indian Tibet, Part 2 (1926), pp. 115–116. Variant spellings include Demchog,[3] Demjok,[4] and Dechhog.[5]
  2. ^ Modern Chinese sources use (Parigas, pinyin: bālǐjiāsī) to refer to a broader area and use (pinyin: diémùchuòkè) to refer to the village of Demchok. See Demchok sector.
  3. ^ Scholars translate the Tibetan term lha-ri as "soul mountain". Many peaks in Tibet are named lhari including a "Demchok lhari" in the northern suburbs of Lhasa.[15][16] "Karpo", meaning "white", serves to distinguish the Ladakh's mountain peak from the others.
  4. ^ On 21 September 1965, the Indian Government wrote to the Chinese Government, complaining of Chinese troops who were said to have "moved forward in strength right up to the Charding Nullah and have assumed a threatening posture at the Indian civilian post on the western [northwestern] side of the Nullah on the Indian side of the 'line of actual control'." The Chinese Government responded on 24 September stating, "In fact, it was Indian troops who on September 18, intruded into the vicinity of the Demchok village on the Chinese side of the 'line of actual control' after crossing the Demchok River from Parigas (in Tibet, China)..."[31]

References

  1. ^ a b "Blockwise Village Amenity Directory" (PDF). Ladakh Autonomous Hill Development Council. Archived from the original (PDF) on 9 September 2016. Retrieved 23 July 2015.
  2. ^ Lack of infra forcing people to migrate from frontier, The Tribune, Chandigar, 17 July 2019.
  3. ^ Bray, John (Winter 1990), "The Lapchak Mission From Ladakh to Lhasa in British Indian Foreign Policy", The Tibet Journal, 15 (4): 77, JSTOR 43300375
  4. ^ Henry Osmaston; Nawang Tsering, eds. (1997), Recent Research on Ladakh 6: Proceedings of the Sixth International Colloquium on Ladakh, Leh 1993, International Association for Ladakh Studies / Motilal Banarsidass Publ., p. 299, ISBN 978-81-208-1432-5
  5. ^ Cunningham, Alexander (1854), Ladak: Physical, Statistical, Historical, London: Wm. H. Allen and Co, p. 328 – via archive.org
  6. ^ a b During discussions in the 1960s, the Chinese government called the Indian village "Parigas" and the Chinese village "Demchok":
  7. ^ https://leh.nic.in/about-district/administrative-setup/village/
  8. ^ Lamb, Treaties, Maps and the Western Sector (1965), p. 39.
  9. ^ a b "Ladakhis deplore Krishna's remark on Demchok road". Archived from the original on 24 December 2013.
  10. ^ Report of the Officials, Chinese Report, Part 2 (1962), pp. 10–11.
  11. ^ Howard & Howard, Historic Ruins in the Gya Valley (2014), p. 83.
  12. ^ Francke, Antiquities of Indian Tibet, Part 2 (1926), p. 94.
  13. ^ Lhari peak and the Demchok villages, OpenStreetMap, retrieved 9 August 2020.
  14. ^ Arpi, The Case of Demchok (2016), p. 12; Handa, Buddhist Western Himalaya (2001), p. 160; Bhattacharji, Ladakh (2012), Chapter 9: "Changthang: The High Plateau"
  15. ^ McKay, Kailas Histories (2015), p. 520.
  16. ^ Khardo Hermitage (Khardo Ritrö), Mandala web site, University of Virginia, retrieved 21 October 2019.
  17. ^ The Middle Way: Journal of the Buddhist Society, Volume 81, The Buddhist Society, 2006: "For Hindus, Kailas is home to the great pan-Indian deity Shiva and for Tibetan Buddhists, it is home to the bodhisattva Dem-chog, the Sanskrit deity Chakrasamvara."
  18. ^ McKay, Kailas Histories (2015), pp. 7, 304, 316.
  19. ^ First ever Chhota Kailash Yatra begins in Ladakh, State Times, 22 June 2017.
  20. ^ First batch of Chota Kailash Yatra leaves for Demchok, Daily Excelsior, 23 June 2017.
  21. ^ Sinha, Nirmal C. (1967), "Demchok (Notes and topics)" (PDF), Bulletin of Tibetology, 4: 23–24: "Demchock is a sacred place within the Hemis complex. The Hemis complex is very ancient (old Sects) and antedates considerably the Yellow Sect and the rise of the Dalai Lamas."
  22. ^ a b Hedin, Southern Tibet (1922), p. 194: "A short distance N. W. of Demchok, the road passes a partly frozen brook [Lhari stream] coming from Demchok-pu, a tributary valley from the left. ... At the left side [Ladakhi side] of the mouth of this little valley, are the ruins of two or three houses, which were said to have belonged to Hemi-gompa. A pyramidal peak at the same.. side of the valley is called La-ri and said to be sacred. The valley, Demchok-pu, itself is regarded as the boundary between Tibet and Ladak."
  23. ^ P.Stobdan, Ladakh concern overrides LAC dispute, The Tribune, 28 May 2020.
  24. ^ A number of historians and Tibetologists have noted this fact: However, Lamb, Treaties, Maps and the Western Sector (1965, p. 38) expresses doubts: "There can be no doubt that the 1684 (or 1683) agreement between Ladakh and the authorities then controlling Tibet did in fact take place. Unfortunately, no original text of it has survived and its terms can only be deduced. In its surviving form there seems to be a reference to a boundary point at "the Lhari stream at Demchok", a stream which would appear to flow into the Indus at Demchok and divide that village into two halves."
  25. ^ Lamb, The China-India border (1964), p. 68.
  26. ^ Kaul, Hriday Nath (2003), India China Boundary in Kashmir, Gyan Publishing House, pp. 60–61, ISBN 978-81-212-0826-0: "Reaching it from Hanle, Strachey found Demchok a hamlet of half a dozen huts, not permanently inhabited, divided into two, one Ladakhi and the other Tibetan, by the rivulet Rha-ri [Lhari stream], which enters the left bank of the Indus."
  27. ^ Report of the Officials, Indian Report, Part 3 (1962), pp. 3–4: "I visited Demchok on the boundary with Lhasa. ... A nullah falls into the Indus river from the south-west and it (Demchok) is situated at the junction of the river. Across is the boundary of Lhasa, where there are 8 to 9 huts of the Lhasa zamindars. On this side there are only two zamindars."
  28. ^ Lange, Decoding Mid-19th Century Maps (2017), pp. 353–354, 357 'Hedin described the place as follows: "Rolled stones play an important part in the country which we have now reached. The whole of Demchok, the last village on the Tibetan side, is built of them. It consists, however, of only four or five huts with brushwood roofs."'
  29. ^ Report of the Officials, Indian Report, Part 3 (1962), p. 41.
  30. ^ Report of the Officials, Indian Report, Part 1 (1962), p. 25: "A little south of Jara Pass [the border] turns south-westward, crosses the Indus about five mile south-east of Demchok, and following the watershed between the Hanle river and the tributaries of the Sutlej river... "
  31. ^ India. Ministry of External Affairs, ed. (1966), Notes, Memoranda and Letters Exchanged and Agreements Signed Between the Governments of India and China: January 1965 - February 1966, White Paper No. XII (PDF), Ministry of External Affairs – via claudearpi.net
  32. ^ a b c Puri, Luv (2 August 2005). "Ladakhis await re-opening of historic Tibet route". The Hindu. Archived from the original on 24 December 2013. Retrieved 19 July 2020.
  33. ^ "expressindia.com - 'Issue of opening Demchok road with China taken up'". 2 April 2005. Archived from the original on 19 September 2012. Retrieved 27 July 2015.
  34. ^ Zhao, Chunjiang; Gao, Baojun (May 2020). Lei, Dongjun (ed.). "西藏典角村,前方距印度碉堡仅600米". Chinese National Geography. Retrieved 19 July 2020. {{cite magazine}}: Cite magazine requires |magazine= (help)
  35. ^ Lamb, Treaties, Maps and the Western Sector (1965), pp. 39, 48.
  36. ^ a b Arpi, Claude (20 June 2016). "A worrying scenario at Ladakh border". Deccan Chronicle. Retrieved 19 July 2020.
  37. ^ a b Irfan, Hakeem (11 July 2018). "China pokes us for lack of progress: Congress Ladakh MLA". The Economic Times. Retrieved 19 July 2020.
  38. ^ a b Sharma, Arteev (17 July 2019). "Lack of infra forcing people to migrate from frontier". The Tribune. Retrieved 29 May 2020.
  39. ^ a b "Leh district census". 2011 Census of India. Directorate of Census Operations. Archived from the original on 24 July 2015. Retrieved 23 July 2015.
  40. ^ Chushul-Demchok road to rein in PLA, The Pioneer, 27 July 2020.
  41. ^ "BRO builds world's highest motorable road in Ladakh at 19,300 feet". Archived from the original on 2 November 2017. Retrieved 2 November 2017.
  42. ^ "Achievements of West Dte during the F/Y 2016-17" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 7 November 2017. Retrieved 2 November 2017.
  43. ^ "54 villages in Ladakh to get mobile connectivity". The Tribune. 26 June 2020. Retrieved 19 July 2020.

Bibliography