‘India Shares Border With Tibet, Not China’: Arunachal Pradesh CM Pema Khandu | India News

Arunachal Pradesh Prime Minister Pema Khandu said that no Indian state, including Arunachal, did not directly share a border with China. Khandu said that Indian states shared a border with Tibet, not China. However, he added that Tibet’s strong occupation by China cannot be rejected. This comes days later, after China states that it is willing to discuss the border problem, including limitation with India.
Speaking with PTI during an interview, Arunachal Cm said that India shared only a border with Tibet. CM Khandu said China forcibly occupied Tibet in 1950 and that China’s control over Tibet could not be ignored. CM, Arunachal Pradesh with Bhutan about 100 km, approximately 1,200 km and Myanmar with 550 km with three international borders, he added.
India-China Border dispute
India and China have been locked in a long -standing border dispute that Beijing claimed that they claimed the territory of India themselves. The two countries established a special representative (SRS) mechanism to solve the border dispute. Recenly, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Mao Ning, China’s border regions peaceful and calm to keep the limitation of India to discuss the negotiation and border management is ready to discuss, he said.
Khandu also praised Dalai Lama and urged the government to give Bharat Ratna to the Tibetan leader in exile.
China Dam in Brahmaputra
Arunchal Cm Khahandu, who talked about the Chinese dam on the Brahamputra River, said that this was a concern for the state and the country. The Mega Dam, built by China close to the Pradesh border by China, said that the dam would be a ‘water bomb’. He proved that it could be a more dangerous existential threat than the Chinese army.
When talking to Pea Khandu, Pema Khandu, he expressed his serious concerns about the construction of the world’s largest dam on the Yarlung Tsangpo River, known as Brahmaputra in India – means that China’s refusal to sign international water treaties is not dependent on global norms. Khandu underlined that China cannot be trusted because the country is unpredictable.



