These 11 maps show how India encroached upon Nepali land
On March 4, 1816, Nepal signed the Sugauli Treaty with the East India company. The treaty is considered the defining document about the border between India and Nepal. The Sugauli Treaty clearly designates the Kali river (also known as Sharada in India and Mahakali in downstream Nepal) as Nepal’s western frontier.

While everyone agrees that Kali is the border between the two countries, there has been a perennial dispute over the origins of the Kali. The dispute surfaced yet again after New Delhi issued a new Map of India on November 2 to demarcate the new union territory of Ladakh.
The new map shows Nepali territories on the eastern banks of the Kali in India. While India says that the map makes no changes to the sovereign territory of India, academics such as Narendra Raj Khanal, a professor of geography in Nepal, state that India has overtime manipulated its maps to lay claim over Nepali territory east of the Kali.
“India states that it has not tampered with the map and the border with Nepal is the same as it was in its old map. But what it doesn’t realise is that even its old map isn’t in accordance with the Treaty of Sugauli,” he shares.
The story of encroachment in 11 maps





The map released by the British Survey of India in 1856 also shows that the source of the Kali River is indeed Limpiyadhura. The map, however, shows ‘Kalopani’ as an area west of the Kali River.


This map called ‘Nepal, Sikkim, Bhutan and Tibet’ published in 1857 also shows Limpiyadhura as the source of the Kali River. Another map published in 1859 also states the same.
Interestingly, a map issued in 1879, marks Lipulekh, further west of the Kali, as the origin of the river. This is what many believe, started the border dispute.

This isn’t it. The name of the Kali River has also been changed and called the ‘Kutiyangli’. However, ‘Kuti’ in the local language, translates to ‘Kali’ and ‘Yanli’ to ‘river’.
In the map above, the Indians changed the name of Lipu Khola and called it ‘Kali River’, and included the Kali River in their own map.



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