Daulat Beg Oldi Explained

Daulat Beg Oldi
Settlement Type:Military Base
Pushpin Map:India Ladakh#India
Pushpin Map Caption:Location in Ladakh, India
Coordinates:35.39°N 77.925°W
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Name: India
Subdivision Type1:Union Territory
Subdivision Name1:Ladakh
Subdivision Type2:District
Subdivision Name2:Leh
Unit Pref:Metric
Elevation M:5100
Population Density Km2:auto
Demographics1 Title1:Official
Timezone1:IST
Utc Offset1:+5:30

Daulat Beg Oldi (also Oldie, DBO) is a traditional campsite and current military base located in the midst of the Karakoram Range in northern Ladakh, India. It is on the historic trade route between Ladakh and the Tarim Basin, and is the last campsite before the Karakoram Pass. It is said to be named after Sultan Said Khan ("Daulat Beg" [''The Statesman'']) of the Yarkent Khanate, who died here on his return journey from an invasion of Ladakh and Kashmir. Chip Chap River, the main headwater of the Shyok River, flows just to the south. The Line of Actual Control with Chinese-controlled Aksai Chin is five miles to the east.

An Indian border outpost was established here in the summer of 1960. An Advance Landing Ground was also constructed here, one of the world's highest airstrips. DBO now has a road link, the 235 km-long Darbuk-Shyok-DBO Road, completed by the Border Roads Organization in 2019 on a new improved alignment.[1]

Location and physical conditions

Daulat Beg Oldi (DBO) lies at the northeastern corner of the Karakoram Range, at the northern edge of Depsang Plains at an elevation of . The international border with China is 8 km to the north and the Line of Actual Control with Chinese-controlled Aksai Chin is 9 km to the east. Other than Siachen Glacier military bases, DBO is India's northernmost settlement. The nearest civilian town is Murgo to the south, which has a small population of Baltis.[2]

The temperature plummets as low as -55 C in the winters. The weather deteriorates frequently with strong icy winds lashing much of DBO. DBO has very little if any vegetation or wildlife. Communication is possible only through INMARSAT (satellite) phones.

History

Expedition of Said Khan (Etymology)

Daulat Beg Oldi literally means "spot where the great and rich man died"[3] in Turki.[4] There are various folklore about whom this refers to—such as the tale about this place being the location where a large caravan was destroyed,[5] or the tale about this place being the burial site of a rich man and his treasure.[6]

According to British colonial-era surgeon Henry Walter Bellew, Daulat Baig Oldi means "the lord of the state died here", and the "lord" was early 16th-century Sultan Said Khan of the Yarkent Khanate.[7] Said Khan purportedly died at this place while returning to Yarkent from a campaign in Ladakh.[8] [9] He is sometimes given the title of Ghaza for his military expeditions.[10]

The account of this military expedition was recorded by his general, Mirza Muhammad Haidar Dughlat, who was the Sultan's first cousin, in the history titled Tarikh-i-Rashidi (تاریخ رشیدی) (History of Rashid).[11]

In autumn 1531 (Safar 938 AH), Sultan Said Khan left Yarkand with Haidar and a few thousand men. On first crossing the Karakorum, the Sultan fell ill with severe altitude sickness, but managed to recover. In the course of a few months of campaigning, they were able to devastate Nubra Valley. As winter approached, they split forces. The Sultan left for Baltistan; Haidar left for Kashmir. In Baltistan, the Sultan encountered a population of friendly Muslims, but he turned on them, killing and enslaving them, possibly because they were Shiites which orthodox Yarkandi Sunnis considered heretic. On the way to Kashmir, Haider defeated the Dras near Zoji La. In Kashmir, he and his troops were hosted by the king of Srinagar. In the spring, the two parties met up again in Maryul, and the Sultan decided to return to Yarkand, but instructed Haider to conquer Tibet for Islam before his departure.[7] [12]

On his way back to Yarkand in the summer of 1533 (end of 939 AH), the Sultan once again suffered severe altitude sickness. This time he succumbed near Karakoram Pass. Bellew argues that the location of his death was at Daulat Beg Oldi. News of the sultan's death led to a bloody struggle for the succession, ending in the ascension of Abdurashid Khan. Abdurashid Khan recalled the forces in Tibet and exiled Haidar. By then, Haidar had had some successes against the Changpa Tibetans of Baryang, but his forces suffered greatly from the altitude and elements. By the time the army returned to Yarkand, of the original several thousands, fewer than a dozen were left. The exiled Haidar took refuge with his maternal aunt in Badakhshan. He eventually joined the ranks of the Mughal Empire, where he wrote the Tarikh-i-Rashidi.[7] [12] [13]

Modern era

The trade route via the Karakoram Pass was used by caravans traveling between Leh and the Tarim Basin. Daulat Beg Oldi was a halting point for the caravans. Filippo de Filippi, who explored the area in 1913–1914, described:Filippi also wrote that the experienced caravaners passed through the Depsang Plains without stopping, travelling a distance of 31 miles between Daulat Beg Oldi and Murgo in a single day. Others stopped, either at Qizil Langar to the south of Depsang La, or at Burtsa further south.

The trading caravans declined during the 1940s during tensions in Xinjiang (Chinese Turkestan) and completely stopped in the 1950s. In 1953, the Indian consulate in Kashgar was closed down. Indian prime minister Jawaharlal Nehru told the Parliament that the Chinese wished to treat Xinjiang as a "closed area". Subsequently, China built the Xinjiang–Tibet Highway through Aksai Chin.[14]

Sino-Indian border dispute

The Republic of China (1912–1949), having faced a revolution in Tibet in 1911, apparently made secret plans to acquire Aksai Chin plateau in order to create a road link between Xinjiang and Tibet. These plans began to get manifested in public maps only towards the end of its rule.[15]

While the Republic of China claims included the Aksai Chin proper, they stopped well behind the Karakoram mountains, leaving all the rivers that flow into the Shyok River within India, including the Chip Chap River. (See map.) Communist China also published the "Big Map of the People's Republic of China" in 1956 with a similar boundary, now called the 1956 claim line.[16]

However, in 1960 China advanced its claim line further west, dissecting the Chip Chap River. The Chinese said little by way of justification for this advancement other than to claim that it was their "traditional customary boundary" which was allegedly formed through a "long historical process". They claimed that the line was altered in the recent past only due to "British imperialism".[17] [18] [19]

Meanwhile, India continued to claim the entire Aksai Chin plateau.

1960–1962

A border post was established at Daulat Beg Oldi (DBO) in 1960 under the supervision of the Intelligence Bureau (IB). By September 1961, the Chinese had established a post in the Chip Chap Valley about 4 miles east of the DBO post as well as roads leading to it. The Indian Army then set up posts at Burtsa, Qizil Langar, at a 'track junction' in the Depsang Plains and at Sultan Chushku. These were intended to block any further extension of Chinese roads. The Intelligence Bureau post at DBO was also reinforced with an Army unit.

The DBO post was fired upon by Chinese forces during the Sino-Indian War on 21 July and 4 August 1962.

1962–present

In April 2013, a platoon-sized contingent of the People's Liberation Army established a campsite 30 km southeast of DBO,[20] a location in the Indian military's "DBO sector." In reference to their own perception of the LAC's location, India initially claimed that the Chinese camp was 10 km on their side, later revising this to a 19 km claim,[21] and claimed that Chinese military helicopters had violated Indian airspace during the incident.[22] In early May, both sides withdrew their units further back.

Transportation

Advanced Landing Ground

Daulat Beg Oldi Advanced Landing Ground
Ensign:Flag of India.svg
Type:Military
Operator:Indian Airforce
Location:Ladakh, India
Elevation-F:16730

The Indian Army maintains helipads and a gravel airstrip here, the highest airstrip in the world. Routine sorties are carried out using An-32 aircraft to provide relief and supplies to the troops stationed nearby.[23] The base was established during the Sino-Indian conflict in 1962, with the first landing by Squadron Leader C.K.S Raje who set a record for the world's highest aircraft landing at the time. It was operated with American-supplied Fairchild Packets from 1962 to 1966, whenit had to be closed down suddenly when an earthquake caused loosening of the surface soil, making the area unsuitable for fixed-wing aircraft.[24] Work was undertaken to make the airfield operational again, and was marked on 31 May 2008, when an Indian Air Force An-32 landed.[25]

The Indian Air Force first landed transports here between 1962 and 1965 and then after a gap for 43 years, the IAF started landing at DBO in 2008. In a significant demonstration of its capabilities, the Indian Air Force landed a C-130J Super Hercules transport aircraft in Daulat Beg Oldi on 20 August 2013, thirty kilometers from where the 2013 Daulat Beg Oldi Incident took place in April 2013. This landing could qualify as a world record for a medium-lift aircraft landing at this altitude.[26] [27] [28]

DS-DBO Road

In 2001, the Indian government decided to construct a motorable road from Leh to Daulat Beg Oldi. The road was completed in 2019. The 255-km is Darbuk-Shyok-DBO Road (DS-DBO Road) runs at elevations between 4,000 and 5,000 metres (13,000–16,000 ft). It follows the old winter caravan route via the Shyok River valley going via Murgo, Burtsa Nala and Depsang Plains. The travel time is said to be six hours.[29]

India-China Border Meeting point

Daulat Beg Oldi – Tianwendian is the highest of the five officially agreed Border Personnel Meeting points between the Indian Army and the People's Liberation Army of China for regular consultations and interactions between the two armies, which helps in defusing stand-offs.[30] The first meeting at this location was held on August 1, 2015 (PLA Day). The events included a Chinese cultural programme and other ceremonies meant to improve relations. Later in the month, India hosted a delegation from the PLA on the occasion of Indian Independence Day and celebrated with traditional songs and dances from Indian culture, Gatka martial arts, and motorcycle acrobatics performed by the Indian Army Corps of Signals.[31] The first ceremonial BPM ever held on New Year's Day was here in 2016.[30]

A meeting hut was constructed approximately a year after the meeting point was opened.[32]

See also

Bibliography

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://www.tribuneindia.com/news/archive/nation/india-completes-vital-ladakh-road-762332# India completes vital Ladakh road
  2. News: Chinese troops intrude into Indian territory in Ladakh, erect a tented post. PTI. The Economic Times. 19 April 2013. 2 January 2020. The nearest inhabited town is Murgo to the south, which has a small population of Baltis who primarily depend on apricot farming and yak rearing..
  3. Web site: Ladakh incursion: India, China face-off at the 'gate of hell'. Praveen. Swami. Firstpost. 23 April 2013. 2 January 2020. Daulat Beg Oldi, the spot where the great and rich man died.
  4. Trotter. H.. On the Geographical Results of the Mission to Kashghar, under Sir T. Douglas Forsyth in 1873-74. Journal of the Royal Geographical Society of London. 48. 1878. 177. 0266-6235. 10.2307/1798763. 1798763. Daulat Beguldi (Turki for "Daulat Beg died", an appropriate name for so desolate a spot).
  5. Book: Teg Bahadur Kapur. Ladakh, the Wonderland: A Geographical, Historical, and Sociological Study. 1987. Mittal Publications. 978-81-7099-011-6. 28. Daulat Beg and his large caravan was entirely destroyed about eighteen miles from the Karakoram pass on the Indian side..
  6. Book: Kapadia, Harish. Into the Untravelled Himalaya: Travels, Treks, and Climbs. 2005. Indus Publishing. 978-81-7387-181-8. 186. It was believed that the rich man, Daulat Beg was buried here with his treasure..
  7. Book: Kohli, Harish. Across the Frozen Himalaya: The Epic Winter Ski Traverse from the Karakoram to Lipu Lekh. 2000. Indus Publishing. 978-81-7387-106-1. 66–67. According to H.W. Bellew, he was no ordinary traveller but a great warrior, a partisan of Babur, the conqueror of Ferghana and the king of Yarkand and Kashgar..
  8. Book: Albert von Le Coq. Buried Treasures of Chinese Turkestan: An Account of the Activities and Adventures of the Second and Third German Turfan Expeditions. 14 December 2018. Taylor & Francis. 978-0-429-87141-2. 292. Daulat Bak Oldi (the royal prince died here), close to the Karakorum pass, is so called because Sultan Said Khan of Kashgar, on his return from a successful campaign against West Tibet, died here from mountain sickness (Plate 50).
  9. "When his Khan decided to return home because of ill health, leaving Mirza Haidar to destroy "the idol temple of Ursang (i.e. Lhasa)", he "set out from Maryul in Tibet, for Yarkand". He "crossed the pass of Sakri", which must be that above Sakti (not the Kardung pass as Elias and Ross suggest), descended to Nubra and died at a camping place named Daulat Beg Uldi which is two-and-a-half hours below the Karakoram Pass."

  10. Book: Bhattacharji , Romesh . Ladakh - Changing, yet Unchanged. 7 June 2012. Rupa Publications Pvt Ltd. 978-8129117618. Some 400 years earlier, in ad 1527, a Yarkandi invader, Sultan Saiad Khan Ghazi (also known as Daulat Beg) of Yarkand, briefly conquered Kashmir after fighting a battle along this pass. He died in 1531 at Daulat Beg Oldi (meaning, where Daulat Beg died) at the foot of the Karakoram pass, after he was returning from an unsuccessful attempt to invade Tibet..
  11. Book: Bellew, Henry Walter. Calcutta. Foreign Department Press. The history of Káshgharia. 1875. 66–67. (p66) Daulat Beg Uild ... "The lord of the State died" ... (p67) Hydar ... wrote the Tarikhi Rashidi from which these details are derived.
  12. Web site: Kashmir and Kashghar. A narrative of the journey of the embassy to Kashghar in 1873-74. Henry Walter. Bellew. Trubner & Co. 1875. 95–98. 3 January 2020. Internet Archive.
  13. Book: Rasuly-Paleczek , Gabriele . Central Asia on Display: Proceedings of the VII Conference of the European Society for Central Asian Studies. Julia. Katschnig. 2. 2005. LIT Verlag Münster. 2 January 2020. 978-3-8258-8586-1. 29. On the 16th dhu-l-hiddjja 939/July 9th, 1533, on the way back from campaign in Minor Tibet (Ladakh) the founder of the Moghuliyya-Chaghataid state in Eastern Turkestan, Sultan Said-khan died..
  14. Claude Arpi, We shut our eyes once, let's not do so again, The Pioneer, 23 March 2017.
  15. "As a part of India, it [Aksai Chin] formed an awkward salient projecting between Sinkiang and Tibet; to get rid of this salient must be an objective of Chinese policy whenever opportunity might offer".

  16. 'However, the "Big Map of the People's Republic of China" published in 1956, reverted to the alignment shown on the 1947 Kuomintang map. It is important to note that Chou En-lai, in a letter of December 17, 1959, stated that the 1956 map "correctly shows the traditional boundary between the two countries in this sector."'

  17. "When questioned on the divergence between the two maps, Chen Yi, the Chinese Foreign Minister, made the demonstrably absurd assertion that the boundaries as marked on both maps were equally valid. There is only one interpretation that could make this statement meaningful: this was an implied threat to produce another map claiming additional Indian territory if New Delhi continued in its stubborn refusal to cede Aksai Chin."

  18. "Beijing insisted that there was no disparity between its maps of 1956 and 1960, a claim that only served to reinforce Delhi’s opinion that the Chinese were untrustworthy. By the summer of 1960 meaningful diplomacy juddered to a halt."

  19. "The Chinese officials maintained ... [the] traditional customary line, reflected in their map, was formed gradually through a long historical process, mainly by the extent up to which each side had exercised administrative jurisdiction;... Without admitting any inconsistency they also argued that the line of actual control differed from the traditional customary line because of British imperialism and the recent pushing forward of India. These factors apparently could not contribute to the continuous process of change."

  20. News: India is no Pushover. 7 May 2013.
  21. News: China's Ladakh Incursion Well-planned. https://web.archive.org/web/20130430035158/http://articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/2013-04-26/india/38842635_1_pla-troops-indian-military-delegation-lt-general-b-s-jaswal. dead. 30 April 2013. 7 May 2013. The Times of India.
  22. News: China's Helicopters Violate Indian Airspace . 7 May 2013 . dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20130513104344/http://www.hindustantimes.com/India-news/JAndK/China-s-helicopters-violate-Indian-airspace/Article1-1049762.aspx . 13 May 2013.
  23. News: IAF Aircraft lands at the highest airstrip in the world . 31 May 2008 . 31 May 2008 . The Times of India . 3 October 2012 . https://web.archive.org/web/20121003094608/http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/articleshowarchive.cms?msid=3088577 . dead.
  24. News: IAF reopens old airbase in Ladakh region . 31 May 2008 . 31 May 2008 . The Times of India.
  25. News: IAF reopens old air base near China border . 31 May 2008 . 31 May 2008 . The Times of India . 22 October 2012 . https://web.archive.org/web/20121022112111/http://articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/2008-05-31/india/27753377_1_air-base-iaf-plans-air-maintenance . dead.
  26. News: IAF's C-130J transporter lands near India-China border . 20 August 2013 . Business Standard . 20 August 2013.
  27. News: 10 reasons why IAF's C-130J Super Hercules landing in Daulat Beg Oldie, Ladakh is important . 20 August 2013 . India Today . 20 August 2013.
  28. News: In show of strength to China, Air Force lands C 130J-30 at Daulat Beg Oldie . 20 August 2013 . NDTV . 20 August 2013.
  29. Web site: India completes vital Ladakh road.
  30. Web site: Indian, Chinese armies decide to improve ties at functional level . News18 . 2 January 2016 . September 14, 2017.
  31. News: New Indo-China border meeting point at Daulat Beg Oldie in Ladakh sector . Aug 15, 2015 . Adil . Akhzer . The Indian Express . April 26, 2016.
  32. News: India, China hold meet in Ladakh on Independence Day . November 19, 2017 . India at Melbourne . August 16, 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20171201030357/http://indiaatmelbourne.com.au/india/india-china-hold-meet-in-ladakh-on-independence-day/ . December 1, 2017 . dead.