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India
AsiaSouth Asia

Herders hemmed in by India and China’s Himalayan stand-off: ‘every year our difficulties mount’

  • Ladakh’s pastoralist way of life undermined after grazing lands closed off and declared demilitarised ‘buffer zones’ to keep rival troops apart

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Shepherds of the Changpa nomadic pastoral tribe walk with their goats at Chushul village in Ladakh, India. Photo: AFP
Agence France-Presse

Lines on a map once meant little to India’s Tibetan herders of the high Himalayas, expertly guiding their goats through even the harshest winters to pastures on age-old seasonal routes.

That stopped in 2020, after troops from nuclear-armed rivals India and China clashed in bitter hand-to-hand combat in the contested high-altitude border lands of Ladakh.

Swathes of grazing lands became demilitarised “buffer zones” to keep rival forces apart.

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For 57-year-old herder Morup Namgyal, like thousands of other seminomadic goat and yak herders from the Changpa pastoralist people, it meant traditional lands were closed off.

“The Indian army stops us from going there,” Namgyal said, pointing to treeless, ice-streaked peaks. “But this is our land, not China’s.”

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Chushul village sits in freezing air at an altitude of some 4,300 metres (14,110 feet), although the herders used to take their flocks even higher.

China and India, the world’s two most populous nations, are intense rivals competing for strategic influence across South Asia.

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