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Amid the border standoff between Indian and Chinese soldiers in Doklam area, reports in the media suggested that the head of the Tibetan government-in-exile, Lobsang Sangay, unfurled the Tibetan national flag on the banks of Pangong Tso lake in Ladakh on 5 July.
Sangay was in Ladakh on the invitation of the Ladakhi community to celebrate the birthday of the Dalai Lama on 6 July.
The lake, which borders Tibet, lies between India and China, with the Line of Actual Control (LAC) passing through it.
In The Wire report, that has now been updated, Dagpo had said that since the the lake is “half in India and half in Tibet”, hoisting of the national flag had “political and personal significance” for Sangay.
Keeping the border standoff in mind, it appears India has tried to gain an upper hand with this move by using the Tibet bargain chip, the senior fellow at Observer Research Foundation (ORF) had added.
She had added that by not admitting Hafiz Saeed as terrorist and using its veto to stop India from joining as a permanent member of the NSG, China had continued being hostile. India has had enough and this move can be seen as a strong response from New Delhi, Rajagopalan said.
Speaking to The Quint, Editor of Stratpost, Saurabh Joshi, said:
A former Indian diplomat with experience in dealing with Indo-China border issues was more cautionary with his observations. "India is at its weakest spot with the border standoff with China and the Kashmir issue and Tibetans might have taken advantage of the situation," he said.
"China has two ways to react to it – it might react harshly or it might be happy that Tibet it taking Indian territory, something that works in their favour," he added.
Talking to people at the event, Sangay said, “Physically, I may be standing just a few metres from Tibet today. However, in terms of political freedom and views, I am still far away from the situation inside Tibet.”
Monks of Namgyal monastery and the settlement officer of Sonamling Tibetan settlement in Ladakh were among the people who attended the prayers.
However, an official statement from the CTA on 9 July refuted that Sangay hoisted the national flag. Instead, the statement said that the flag was not hoisted by Sangay but belonged to a Tibetan settled by the Pangong lake.
According to a statement accessed by The Quint, the flag has been present at the spot since 10 December 1989.
The official statement clarified that Sangay hoisted the Buddhist prayer flag not the Tibetan National flag.
In the past few days, a stand-off on a plateau next to the mountainous Indian state of Sikkim, which borders China, has ratcheted up tension between the neighbouring giants. The countries share a 3,500-km frontier, large parts of which are disputed.
While China has been claiming that India violated a 1890 treaty when Indian soldiers entered Chinese territory, India and Bhutan have both said that China had changed the status-quo by building a road in the Doklam area.
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