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0437 Tibet and Turkestan : vol.1
チベットとトルキスタン : vol.1
Tibet and Turkestan : vol.1 / 437 ページ(カラー画像)

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doi: 10.20676/00000231
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APPENDIX H

Pages 25, 42–3, and 52–3 of "Papers Relating to Tibet, 1904."

(Note the admissions that (a) no practical inconvenience re-
sulted from delay in demarcation, (b) that the territory in
question is valueless to Sikkim, (c) that there are good grounds
for supposing the contention of the Tibetans to be just. Then
note the expression "surrender of territory."—O. T. C.)

A

Extracts from a Letter from the Government of India, in
the Foreign Department, to the Right Honourable H.
H. Fowler, Her Majesty's Secretary of State for
India, dated Simla, the 25th June, 1895. (Received
the 15th July, 1895.)

5. The Lieutenant-Governor of Bengal recommended
that, if the Chinese and Tibetan delegates were unable to at
once join Mr. White, he should be authorised to proceed
alone to lay down the boundary where no dispute is known
to exist. Demarcation was not, however, provided for in
the Treaty of 1890; no serious practical inconvenience had
apparently arisen through the frontier being undemarcated,
and under all the circumstances we considered it preferable
that Mr. White should not proceed alone beyond the Doka
La. We accordingly directed that, if the Chinese delegates
failed to meet him there on or about the 1st June, he should
explain matters by letter to the Chinese Resident and return
to Gantok.
6. Mr. White subsequently reported that the pillar
erected at the Jeylap La had been demolished by Tibetans,
and that the pillar on the Donchuk La had been wilfully
damaged. The Lieutenant-Governor wished us to bring
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