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India-Tibet-China: Trans-Himalayan Conflict : Causes and Consequences

India-Tibet-China: Trans-Himalayan Conflict : Causes and Consequences

Phanindranath Chakrabarti
570 570 (0% off)
ISBN 13
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9789384101138
Year
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2015
Contents: Foreword. Introduction. 1. Sovereign and Independent status of Tibet. 2. Anglo-Bhutan War (1772) and its impact. 3. The last unofficial British commercial Mission of Tibet. 4. Tibeto-Russian relations. 5. British policy in Tibet since 1774. 6. Tibet?s Independent foreign policy. 7. Sino-British policy in Tibet. 8. Trans-Himalayan conflict. 9. Epilogue. Selected bibliography. Index. China has neither any legal nor any kind of right on Tibet. The invasion of Tibet and the act of hostility on India are to be treated as botched act. People outside Tibet has little or no idea about the separate entity of Tibet. Culturally and ethnologically the Tibetans and the Chinese are different stock of people. Tibetans are a Central Asian tribe having more ethnic affinity extending through Mongolia to trans-Baikal people, such as events, Yakuts, Orochhins and the Tungus. Tibetans are, in fact a stock of people who are not in favour of foreign domination. The Dalai Lama the spiritual and political leader of the Tibetans had kept the Tibetans deprived of all sorts of necessities of life for centuries. The then Prime Minister of India Jawaharlal Nehru accepted for unknown reason, that, Tibet had no separate entity, but an integral part of China.