Lipulekh Pass

High mountain pass connecting and India with Tibet, China


title: "Lipulekh Pass" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["china–india-border-crossings", "geography-of-pithoragarh-district", "mountain-passes-of-uttarakhand", "mountain-passes-of-tibet", "mountain-passes-of-the-himalayas", "territorial-disputes-of-india", "territorial-disputes-of-nepal"] description: "High mountain pass connecting and India with Tibet, China" topic_path: "geography" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lipulekh_Pass" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary High mountain pass connecting and India with Tibet, China ::

::data[format=table title="Infobox mountain pass"]

FieldValue
nameLipu-Lekh Pass
mapIndia Uttarakhand#China Tibet Ngari#Nepal Sudurpashchim Province
elevation_ft16780
elevation_ref
locationBorder between Uttarakhand, India and Tibet, China
rangeHimalayas
coordinates
map_relief0
::

| name = Lipu-Lekh Pass | photo = | photo_caption = | map = India Uttarakhand#China Tibet Ngari#Nepal Sudurpashchim Province | elevation_ft = 16780 | elevation_ref = | traversed = | location = Border between Uttarakhand, India and Tibet, China | range = Himalayas | coordinates = | map_relief = 0 | topo = | order = st | s = 里普列克山口 | t = 里普列克山口 | p = Lǐ pǔ liè kè shānkǒu | coord =
| float = right | zoom = 10 | width = 285 | height = 275 | caption = The vicinity of the Lipulekh Pass | nolabels = 1 | map-data = Q1499 | mark-coord1 = | mark1 = Mountain pass 12x12 e.svg | mark-size1 = 12 | label1 = Lipulekh |labela1 = Pass | label-size1 = 10 | label-color1 = hard red | label-pos1 = right | label-offset-x1 = 0 | label-offset-y1 = -5 | mark-title1 = Lipulekh Pass | mark-description1 = Point on China–India border | mark-coord2 = | mark2 = Red pog.svg | mark-size2 = 6 | label2 = Kalapani |labela2 = village | label-size2 = 10 | label-color2 = hard red | label-pos2 = top |label-offset-x2 = -8 |label-offset-y2 = 0 | mark-title2 = Kalapani village | mark-description2 = | mark-coord3 = | mark3 = Red pog.svg | mark-size3 = 6 | label3 = Burang | label-size3 = 10 | label-color3 = hard red | label-pos3 = left |label-offset-x3 = 0 |label-offset-y3 = 0 | mark-title3 = Burang | mark-description3 = Tibetan town | mark-coord4 = | mark4 = Red pog.svg | mark-size4 = 6 | label4 = Gunji | label-size4 = 10 | label-color4 = hard red | label-pos4 = right |label-offset-x4 = 0 |label-offset-y4 = 0 | mark-title4 = Gunji | mark-description4 = | mark-coord5 = | mark5 = Blue Fire.svg | mark-size5 = 12 | label5 = P. 6172 | label-size5 = 10 | label-color5 = hard blue | label-pos5 = bottom |label-offset-x5 = -4 |label-offset-y5 = 0 | mark-title5 = P. 6172 | mark-description5 = | mark-coord6 = | mark6 = Blue Fire.svg | mark-size6 = 12 | label6 = Om Parvat | label-size6 = 10 | label-color6 = hard blue | label-pos6 = bottom |label-offset-x6 = -24 |label-offset-y6 = 0 | mark-title6 = Om Parvat | mark-description6 = Peak on India–Nepal border | mark-coord7 = | mark7 = Mountain pass 12x12 ne.svg | mark-size7 = 12 | label7 = Tinkar |labela7 = Pass | label-size7 = 10 | label-color7 = hard red | label-pos7 = right |label-offset-x7 = 0 |label-offset-y7 = -5 | mark-title7 = Tinkar Pass | mark-description7 = Mountain pass on China–Nepal border | mark-coord8 = | mark8 = Red pog.svg | mark-size8 = 6 | label8 = Changru | label-size8 = 10 | label-color8 = hard red | label-pos8 = top |label-offset-x8 = 15 |label-offset-y8 = 0 | mark-title8 = Changru | mark-description8 = | mark-coord9 = | mark9 = Red pog.svg | mark-size9 = 6 | label9 = Tinkar | label-size9 = 10 | label-color9 = hard red | label-pos9 = top |label-offset-x9 = -4 |label-offset-y9 = 0 | mark-title9 = Tinkar | mark-description9 = | mark-coord10 =
| mark10 = AS-rzeka-icon.svg | mark-size10 = 11 | label10 = Kalapani |labela10 = River | label-size10 = 10 | label-color10 = hard blue | label-pos10 = bottom |label-offset-x10 = 10 |label-offset-y10 = 0 | mark-title10 = Kalapani River | mark-description10= Also called Lipu Gad, headwater of Kali | mark-coord12 = | mark12 = AS-rzeka-icon.svg | mark-size12 = 11 | label12 = Tinkar |labela12 = Khola | label-size12 = 10 | label-color12 = hard blue | label-pos12 = right |label-offset-x12 = 0 |label-offset-y12 = 0 | mark-title12 = Tinkar Khola | mark-description12 = Tributary of Kali in Nepal | mark-coord20 = | mark20 = red pog.svg | mark-size20 = 0 | label20 = KUMAON |labela20 = (INDIA) | label-size20 = 14 | label-color20 = dark grey | label-pos20 = top |label-offset-x20 = 0 |label-offset-y20 = 0 | mark-title20 = Kumaon | mark-description20 = Part of Uttarakhand | mark-coord21 = | mark21 = red pog.svg | mark-size21 = 0 | label21 = NEPAL | label-size21 = 14 | label-color21 = dark grey | label-pos21 = top |label-offset-x21 = 0 |label-offset-y21 = 0 | mark-title21 = Nepal | mark-description21 = | mark-coord22 = | mark22 = red pog.svg | mark-size22 = 0 | label22 = TIBET |labela22 = (CHINA) | label-size22 = 14 | label-color22 = dark grey | label-pos22 = top |label-offset-x22 = 0 |label-offset-y22 = 0 | mark-title22 = Tibet | mark-description22 = Autonomous region of China The Lipulekh Pass or Qiang La () is a Himalayan pass on the border between Uttarakhand, India and the Tibet region of China, near their trijunction with Nepal. Nepal has had ongoing claims to the southern side of the pass, called Kalapani territory, which has been under Indian administration from the British colonial period. The pass is near the trading town of Taklakot (Purang) in Tibet and has been used since ancient times by traders, mendicants and pilgrims transiting between India and Tibet. It is also used by pilgrims to Kailas and Manasarovar.

History

::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/c/c2/1879-Survey-of-India-Kalapani-territory.jpg" caption="An 1879 Survey of India map showing the Kalapani territory as part of Kumaon, India"] ::

::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/3/37/KAILASH_4.JPG" caption="Mount Kailas and Manasarovar from the south"] ::

The Lipulekh Pass was one of the passes historically used for Indo-Tibetan border trade by the Bhotiyas of Kumaon. Each of the Bhotiya valleys lying along the border, Gori, Darma, Chaudans and Byans, had its own passes to Tibet. Of these, Chaudansis (in the Kali River valley) and Byansis (in the Kuthi and Tinkar valleys) used the Lipulekh pass. Lipulekh was considered the most "famous" among the passes because it is closest to the Tibetan trading centre Purang, and it also leads directly to Mount Kailash, a pilgrimage destination for Hindus and Buddhists.

In 1791, the Nepalese Gorkha kingdom conquered Kumaon and took possession of the entire region. Border tensions with British colonial regime led to the Anglo-Nepalese War (1814–1816). The British evicted the Nepalese from Kumaon and set the Kali River as the border between Kumaon and Nepal, later confirmed in the Treaty of Sugauli.

However, what was meant by "Kali River" in the upper reaches of the Himalayas became a matter of dispute. Initially, the British retained the Kuthi Valley in the west, the Tinkar Valley in the east, as well as the Kalapani valley leading to the Lipulekh pass, as part of Kumaon. These three valleys carry three head streams to Kali River and are populated by Byansis. Following Nepalese objections, the British Governor-General made enquiries with the local populations as well as the British surveyor (W. J. Webb, who surveyed the area) and decided that the Kalapani valley carried the main Kali River. Accordingly, the Tinkar Valley in the east was ceded to Nepal. Letter of the Government of India to Commissioner of Kumaon, September 5, 1817. Included in Rakesh Sood, A Reset in India–Nepal Relations, blog post at rakeshsood.in with attachments for an article published in The Hindu, 29 May 2020. "Governor General entirely approves your having declined to transfer to the Chountra Bum Sah the two villages of Koontee [Kuthi] and Nabee [Nabi] in Pergunah Byanse without the specific orders of the Government on the ground of their being situated to the west of the stream ordinarily recognized as the principal branch of the Kali in that quarter." (emphasis added)

This arrangement would have made the Lipulekh Pass the trijunction between Kumaon, Nepal and Tibet. However, a further adjustment was made around 1865, when the British shifted the border near Lipulekh to the watershed of the Kalapani stream instead of the stream itself. This made a 35 square kilometre area to the east of Kalapani valley, now known as the Kalapani territory, part of British India. The trijunction between Kumaon, Nepal and Tibet shifted to the vicinity of Tinkar Pass and the Lipulekh Pass became an interior point of British India. : "The drainage area of the Kalapani lies wholly within British territory, but a short way below the springs the Kali forms the boundary with Nepal." (Emphasis added) There are no extant documents regarding any communications on the issue. However, around the same time that the British claimed the Kalapani territory, they had also ceded to Nepal the western Tarai regions, which were later named "Naya Muluk" ("New Lands") by Nepal. The addition of these regions was of significant economic benefit to Nepal.

  • pp. 46–47: "In return, the British restored to Nepal the western Tarai, taken in 1816, and conferred an honorary knighthood on Jang [Bahadur Rana] himself."
  • pp. 54–55: "... the Ranas secured a steady rise in state revenue, which rose from around 1.4 million rupees in 1850 to perhaps 12 million in 1900, a substantial rise even allowing for inflation. ... Particularly important was the return to Nepal in 1860 of the western Tarai districts, which were initially very sparsely populated."

The border adjustment made little difference on the ground because a free movement regime operated between Nepal and India, and the Byansis of Tinkar Valley continued to use the Lipulekh Pass. (It has been reported that they were unable to use the Tinkar Pass because of low volume of traffic.) It was only after India restricted the Tinkaris from using Lipulekh Pass after the 1960s that a dispute began to surface.

In 1954, India signed a border trade agreement with China, in which Lipulekh Pass was mentioned as one of the passes that could be used for Indo-Tibetan trade and pilgrimage traffic. A State Police post was established at Kalapani in 1956. In 1961, Nepal signed a border agreement with China, which recognised the trijunction between the three countries being near Tinkar Pass, and a border pillar numbered 1 was placed there.

After the 1962 Sino-Indian War, India closed the Lipulekh Pass. The Byansis of Kumaon then used the Tinkar Pass for all their trade with Tibet. In 1979, the Kalapani post was came to be manned by Indo-Tibetan Border Police.

In 1991, India and China agreed to reopen the Lipulekh pass, and the trade through it steadily increased.

Tourism

This pass links the Pithoragarh district India with the Tibet Autonomous Region of China, and forms the last territorial point in India's territory. The Kailash Mansarovar Yatra, a Hinduism pilgrimage to Mount Kailash and Lake Manasarovar, traverses this pass. Lipulekh pass is connected to Chang Lobochahela, near the old trading town of Purang (Taklakot), in Tibet.

In 2024, Uttarakhand government has identified a viewpoint on the western shoulder of the pass, which it termed "Old Lipulekh Peak" (), from where Mount Kailash can be seen.

India-China Trading Post

The pass was the first Indian border post to be opened for trade with China in 1992. This was followed by the opening of Shipki La, Himachal Pradesh in 1994 and Nathu La, Sikkim in 2006. Presently, Lipulekh Pass is open for cross-border trade every year from June through September.

Products cleared for export from India include jaggery, misri, tobacco, spices, pulses, fafar flour, coffee, vegetable oil, ghee and various miscellaneous consumable items. The main imports into India include sheep wool, passam, sheep, goats, borax, yak tails, chhirbi (butter) and raw silk.

India-China BPM (Border Personnel Meeting) point

In 2014, India and China discussed using the pass as an additional official Border Personnel Meeting point between the Indian Army and the People's Liberation Army of China for regular consultations and interactions between the two armies to improve relations.

Nepalese claims

Main article: Kalapani territory

The Nepalese claims to the southern side of the pass, called Kalapani territory, are based on 1816 Sugauli Treaty between British East India Company and Nepal. The treaty delimited the boundary along the Kali River (also called the Sharda River and Mahakali River). India claims that the river begins at the Kalapani village as this is where all its tributaries merge. But Nepal claims that it begins from the Lipulekh Pass. The historical record shows that, some time around 1865, the British shifted the border near Kalapani to the watershed of the Kalapani river instead of the river itself, thereby claiming the area now called the Kalapani territory. This is consistent with the British position that the Kali River begins only from the Kalapani springs, which meant that the agreement of Sugauli did not apply to the region above the springs. : "India holds that the river Kali begins from the meeting point of the Lipu Gad with the stream from Kalapani springs." (p. 63); See also Kalapani: A Bone of Contention Between India and Nepal, Institute of Peace and Conflict Studies, 2000

After the Indian prime minister's visit to China in 2015, India and China agreed to open a trading post in Lipulekh, raising objections from Nepal. Lipulekh dispute: UCPN (M) writes to PM Koirala, Indian PM Modi & Chinese Prez Xi, The Kathmandu Post, 9 July 2015. The Nepalese parliament stated that 'it violates Nepal's sovereign rights over the disputed territory'. Nepal now intends to resolve the issue via diplomatic means with India.

Notes

References

Bibliography

References

  1. (2016). "Confluent territories and overlapping sovereignties: Britain's nineteenth-century Indian empire in the Kumaon Himalaya". Journal of Historical Geography.
  2. Chatterjee, Bishwa B.. (January 1976). "The Bhotias of Uttarakhand". India International Centre Quarterly.
  3. Hoon, Vineeta. (1996). "Living on the Move: Bhotiyas of the Kumaon Himalaya". Sage Publications.
  4. (2014). "Nepal-India Relations: Territorial/Border Issue with Specific Reference to Mahakali River". Foreign Policy Research Centre.
  5. (June 2001). "Nepal-India Boundary Issue: River Kali as International Boundary". Tribhuvan University Journal.
  6. Mishra, Ratneshwar. (2007). "Ethnicity and National Unification: The Madheshis of Nepal (Sectional President's Address)". Proceedings of the Indian History Congress.
  7. {{harvp. Strachey, Narrative of a Journey to Cho Lagan etc.. 1848: "We met a smiling rosy-faced ''Tinker'' [resident of Tinkar] on the top of Nirpaniah, who ... informed me that his pass is not so easy as Lipu Lekh, and the snow on it more troublesome, because his village has but 5 or 6 ''Man'' (families) whose small traffic is insufficient to make a good beaten path."
  8. Nihar R. Nayak, [https://idsa.in/idsacomments/ControversyoverLipu-LekhPass_nnayak_080615 Controversy over Lipu-Lekh Pass: Is Nepal’s Stance Politically Motivated?], IDSA Comment, Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses, 9 June 2015: "In effect, Lipu-Lekh has been a recognized trading and pilgrim route between China and India since 1954."
  9. Schrader, Heiko. (1988). "Trading Patterns in the Nepal Himalayas". Bow Historical Books.
  10. (2016). "Prospects for Sino-Indian Trans-border Economic Linkages". International Studies.
  11. (2016). "India China: Rethinking Borders and Security". University of Michigan Press.
  12. Mansingh, Surjit. (2005). "India-China Relations in the Context of Vajpayee's 2003 Visit". The Elliott School of International Affairs, The George Washington University.
  13. [https://www.ndtv.com/india-news/how-uttarakhand-is-providing-closer-darshan-to-kailash-mansarovar-pilgrims-4161928 How Uttarakhand Is Providing "Closer Darshan" To Kailash-Mansarovar Pilgrims], NDTV News, 29 June 2023.
  14. (Oct 28, 2014). "Indian soldiers prevent Chinese troops from constructing road in Arunachal". The Times of India.
  15. [https://www.deccanherald.com/opinion/main-article/india-nepal-and-the-kalapani-issue-777804.html India, Nepal and the Kalapani issue], Decan Herald, 19 November 2019.
  16. [http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/politics-and-nation/nepal-objects-to-india-china-trade-pact-via-lipu-lekh-pass/articleshow/47604908.cms Nepal objects to India-China trade pact via Lipu-Lekh Pass], The Economic Times, 9 June 2015.
  17. (8 November 2019). "Post-J&K map ache spreads to Nepal". Telegraph India.

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china–india-border-crossingsgeography-of-pithoragarh-districtmountain-passes-of-uttarakhandmountain-passes-of-tibetmountain-passes-of-the-himalayasterritorial-disputes-of-indiaterritorial-disputes-of-nepal