Galwan Valley

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=History=
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[https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/a-porter-who-gave-galwan-valley-its-name/articleshow/76459447.cms  Rohan Dua, July 4, 2020: ''The Times of India'']
  
=Attacks by China=
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[[File: The cover of Ladakhi explorer and adventurer Ghulam Rasul Galwan’s autobiographical account .jpg|The cover of Ladakhi explorer and adventurer Ghulam Rasul Galwan’s autobiographical account  <br/> From: [https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/a-porter-who-gave-galwan-valley-its-name/articleshow/76459447.cms Rohan Dua, July 4, 2020: ''The Times of India'']|frame|500px]]
==Early 1900s==
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[https://epaper.timesgroup.com/Olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL%2F2020%2F06%2F19&entity=Ar01600&sk=587D702B&mode=text Rohan Dua, June 19, 2020: ''The Times of India'']
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[[File: The attack is mentioned in Ghulam Rasul Galwan’s ‘Servant of Sahibs- Asakal of Leh’.jpg|The attack is mentioned in Ghulam Rasul Galwan’s ‘Servant of Sahibs- Asakal of Leh’ <br/> From: [https://epaper.timesgroup.com/Olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL%2F2020%2F06%2F19&entity=Ar01600&sk=587D702B&mode=text Rohan Dua, June 19, 2020: ''The Times of India'']|frame|500px]]
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[[File: Inside pages of Ghulam Rasul Galwan’s autobiographical account .jpg|Inside pages of Ghulam Rasul Galwan’s autobiographical account <br/> From: [https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/a-porter-who-gave-galwan-valley-its-name/articleshow/76459447.cms Rohan Dua, July 4, 2020: ''The Times of India'']|frame|500px]]
  
Days after the India-China face-off in Galwan river valley, the family of Ladhakhi writer and explorer Ghulam Rasul Galwan — from whom the valley gets its name — recalled another brutal encounter on the same land, this one a century ago, that their ancestor had with Chinese soldiers during an expedition in the 1900s.
 
  
“It pains us that more than 100 years on, Chinese transgressions have continued. Galwan Valley is named after my great-grandfather who bravely fought the Chinese and lived to tell the tale,” Manzoor, the author’s great-grandson, told TOI from his home in Leh’s Yourtung on Thursday.
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''Source: Rasul Bailay, great-grandson of Ghulam Rasul Galwan in economictimes.com''
Galwan’s grandson, Amin, a 65-year-old retired government servant, recalled the Chinese attack mentioned in his grandfather’s autobiography ‘Servant of Sahibs: Asakal of Leh’. He said: “My grandfather had taken along sahibs (as British were called then) for an expedition near the valley in the early 1900s when there were several instances of Chinese soldiers beating them up. One day, there was news of another attack and armed with sticks my grandfather and a few others ran after four Chinese soldiers on horses. When they were on their way back to camp, some Chinese men attacked them brutally. They managed to flee and hide in a house for some time but when they came out, the Chinese encircled them. It was only when my grandfather feigned death that they left.”
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Galwan lay there until some British men came to his rescue several hours later. It’s his tales of exploration and courage that are often cited in the region. Galwan’s journey from a porter to an ‘aksakal’ or assistant to the then British joint commissioner at Leh is recorded in gazetteers.
+
  
Amin said his grandfather was born in 1878 in Leh and worked as a guide for the British in Tibet, the mountains of central Asia especially the Karakoram Range when he was barely 12. It was a time when the British were anxious about Russian expansion with an eye on Tibet. Galwan guided troops through the hostile territory and gathered intelligence about Russian plans that could compromise British interests in India. Tahir, another one of his greatgrandsons, said “It’s time that we give a strong push to Indian brands. The Galwan valley will always remain ours.
+
Days after the India-China face-off in Galwan river valley, the family of Ladhakhi writer and explorer Ghulam Rasul Galwan from whom the valley gets its name recalled another brutal encounter on the same land, this one a century ago, that their ancestor had with Chinese soldiers during an expedition in the 1900s.  
  
=2020=
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“It pains us that more than 100 years on, Chinese transgressions have continued. Galwan valley is named after my great-grandfather who bravely fought the Chinese and lived to tell the tale,” Manzoor, the author’s great-grandson, told TOI from his home in Leh’s Yourtung.
==Beginning of the clash==
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[https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/china-ordered-attack-on-indian-troops-in-galwan-river-valley-us-intel/articleshow/76528366.cms  China ordered attack on Indian troops in Galwan River Valley: US Intel, June 23, 2020: ''The Times of India'']
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WASHINGTON: A senior Chinese general authorised his forces to attack Indian troops in the Galwan River valley, resulting in a brutal skirmish that killed dozens and dramatically escalated tensions between the two Asian powerhouses, according to a U.S. intelligence assessment.  
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Galwan’s grandson, Amin, a 65-year-old retired government servant, recalled the Chinese attack mentioned in his grandfather’s autobiography ‘Servant of Sahibs: Asakal of Leh’. He said: “My grandfather had taken along sahibs (as British were called then) for an expedition near the valley in the early 1900s when there were several instances of Chinese soldiers beating them up. One day, there was news of another attack and armed with sticks my grandfather and a few others ran after four Chinese soldiers riding horses. When they were on their way back to camp, some Chinese men attacked them brutally. They managed to flee and hide in a house for some time but when they came out, the Chinese encircled them. It was only when my grandfather feigned death that they left.
  
Gen. Zhao Zongqi, head of the Western Theater Command and among the few combat veterans still serving in the People's Liberation Army, approved the operation along the contested border region of northern India and southwestern China, a source familiar with the assessment says on the condition of anonymity.
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Galwan lay there until some British men came to his rescue several hours later. It's his tales of exploration and courage that are often cited in the region. Galwan’s journey from a porter to an ‘aksakal’ or assistant to the then British joint commissioner at Leh is recorded in gazetteers.  
According to U.S. News, Zhao, who has overseen prior standoffs with India, has previously expressed concerns that China must not appear weak to avoid exploitation by the United States and its allies, including in New Delhi, the source says, and saw the faceoff last week as a way to "teach India a lesson."
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The assessment contradicts China's subsequent assertions about what happened on June 15.  
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Amin said his grandfather was born in 1878 in Leh and worked as a guide for the British in Tibet, the mountains of central Asia — especially the Karakoram Range — when he was barely 12. It was a time when the British were anxious about Russian expansion with an eye on Tibet. Galwan guided troops through the hostile territory and gathered intelligence about Russian plans that could compromise British interests in India.
  
And it indicates the deadly and contentious incident - in which at least 20 Indian and 35 Chinese troops died, and reportedly a handful on each side were captured and subsequently released - was not the result of a tense circumstance that spiralled out of control, as has happened before, but rather a purposeful decision by Beijing to send a message of strength to India.  
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Renowned Ladakhi historian Abdul Ghani Sheikh said that it was during an expedition with Lord Dunmore that bad weather led their caravan astray. Galwan then went in search of a route they could use and reached a river. He found one and the explorers escape certain death. Grateful, Dunmore named the valley and the river after Galwan. “He was the first man from Ladakh to write a book in English.
  
Yet that plan appears to have backfired, as the incident sparked widespread outrage in India that continues a week later. And Beijing's attempts to make India more amenable to future negotiations, including about contested territory, instead appear to have pushed the economic giant closer to the U.S.  
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“I have never heard of an instance of naming of major geographical feature after a native explorer. British names have been given but never heard of one being named after a local,” says Harish Kapadia, mountaineer, author and long-time editor of the Himalayan Journal.  
  
Much is at stake, far beyond territorial control. The U.S. has pressured India for months to back away from employing Chinese tech company Huawei to help build its 5G infrastructure. In the aftermath of June 15 incident Indians were reportedly deleting Chinese social media app TikTok and destroying phones made in China.  
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Many independent ecologists and historians in Ladakh share old records of how Galwan undertook treks with iconic global travellers of that era including 7th Earl of Dunmore, Charles Murray, English geologist Godwin Austen, Sir Francis Younghusband and Italian zoologist Fillipo de Fillipo.
  
"It does the very opposite of what China wanted," the source says, adding that "this is not a victory for China's military."
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Tahir, another one of his great-grandsons, dreams of opening a memorial in Galwan valley as a tribute to his great-grandfather. But he has concerns. “A lot of Chinese goods, such as electronics and apparel, reach Ladakh via Nepal. It’s time that we boycott such products and give a strong push to Indian brands,” the alumnus of Delhi University said, adding, “The Galwan valley will always remain ours.
  
It remains unclear the extent to which Chinese President Xi Jinping was involved in the decisions that led to the bloody encounter, though analysts familiar with Chinese military decision making say he would have almost certainly known about the orders.
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'''LIFE AND TIMES OF GHULAM RASUL GALWAN'''
  
Troops had massed on both sides of the border in recent months in the northern India region of Ladakh and the southwestern Chinese region of Aksai Chin, causing global concerns of a potential escalation between the two.  
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Born in 1878, Galwan either led or was part of numerous expeditions into Tibet, Yarkand (now in the Uygur Autonomous Region of Xinjiang, China), the Karakoram range, the Pamirs and other Central Asian regions — mostly through inhospitable geographies with altitudes ranging from 5,000 m to 7,000 m above the sea level and where temperature plunged to -30 degree Celsius in the winter.
  
Private geo-intelligence firm Hawkeye 360 recently reported that satellite imagery from late May showed a buildup on the Chinese side of what appeared to be armed personnel carriers and self-propelled artillery.
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Galwan was forced to go on risky, long-distance expeditions at a young age, to supplement the income of his single mother, a winnower. But the path he chose due to compulsion, became a passion and he never looked back.
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Starting out as a porter and pony man, he rose through the ranks to eventually become the 'aksakal' or the chief assistant of the British joint commissioner at Leh.
  
==Damage to China==
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He died at 47, in 1925 and appears to have been travelling nearly all of his relatively short life, with the legendary names of those times.
===Death of Chinese officers===
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[https://epaper.timesgroup.com/Olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL%2F2020%2F06%2F23&entity=Ar00106&sk=EBD092A6&mode=text  China confirms death of 2 officers, including CO, June 23, 2020: ''The Times of India'']
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China has confirmed that the commanding officer and another officer of the PLA battalion that instigated a bloody confrontation with Indian troops on the night of June 15 in Galwan Valley were killed in the clashes.
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The Chinese side had informed the Indians soon afterwards about the deaths of their officers, but this has come to light only now. TOI had in its edition of June 18 reported the deaths in the PLA ranks (see screenshot) on the basis of intelligence sources.
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A confirmation by China is significant. This is perhaps the first time since the clash with Vietnam in 1979—a military disaster for China—that PLA has suffered battle fatalities. The Chinese foreign ministry has refrained from acknowledging the losses suffered by PLA. Chinese media reports on the first day acknowledged PLA had lost an unspecified number of men.
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Latest revision as of 16:11, 5 May 2021

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[edit] History

Rohan Dua, July 4, 2020: The Times of India

The cover of Ladakhi explorer and adventurer Ghulam Rasul Galwan’s autobiographical account
From: Rohan Dua, July 4, 2020: The Times of India
Inside pages of Ghulam Rasul Galwan’s autobiographical account
From: Rohan Dua, July 4, 2020: The Times of India


Source: Rasul Bailay, great-grandson of Ghulam Rasul Galwan in economictimes.com

Days after the India-China face-off in Galwan river valley, the family of Ladhakhi writer and explorer Ghulam Rasul Galwan — from whom the valley gets its name — recalled another brutal encounter on the same land, this one a century ago, that their ancestor had with Chinese soldiers during an expedition in the 1900s.

“It pains us that more than 100 years on, Chinese transgressions have continued. Galwan valley is named after my great-grandfather who bravely fought the Chinese and lived to tell the tale,” Manzoor, the author’s great-grandson, told TOI from his home in Leh’s Yourtung.


Galwan’s grandson, Amin, a 65-year-old retired government servant, recalled the Chinese attack mentioned in his grandfather’s autobiography ‘Servant of Sahibs: Asakal of Leh’. He said: “My grandfather had taken along sahibs (as British were called then) for an expedition near the valley in the early 1900s when there were several instances of Chinese soldiers beating them up. One day, there was news of another attack and armed with sticks my grandfather and a few others ran after four Chinese soldiers riding horses. When they were on their way back to camp, some Chinese men attacked them brutally. They managed to flee and hide in a house for some time but when they came out, the Chinese encircled them. It was only when my grandfather feigned death that they left.”

Galwan lay there until some British men came to his rescue several hours later. It's his tales of exploration and courage that are often cited in the region. Galwan’s journey from a porter to an ‘aksakal’ or assistant to the then British joint commissioner at Leh is recorded in gazetteers.

Amin said his grandfather was born in 1878 in Leh and worked as a guide for the British in Tibet, the mountains of central Asia — especially the Karakoram Range — when he was barely 12. It was a time when the British were anxious about Russian expansion with an eye on Tibet. Galwan guided troops through the hostile territory and gathered intelligence about Russian plans that could compromise British interests in India.

Renowned Ladakhi historian Abdul Ghani Sheikh said that it was during an expedition with Lord Dunmore that bad weather led their caravan astray. Galwan then went in search of a route they could use and reached a river. He found one and the explorers escape certain death. Grateful, Dunmore named the valley and the river after Galwan. “He was the first man from Ladakh to write a book in English.”

“I have never heard of an instance of naming of major geographical feature after a native explorer. British names have been given but never heard of one being named after a local,” says Harish Kapadia, mountaineer, author and long-time editor of the Himalayan Journal.

Many independent ecologists and historians in Ladakh share old records of how Galwan undertook treks with iconic global travellers of that era including 7th Earl of Dunmore, Charles Murray, English geologist Godwin Austen, Sir Francis Younghusband and Italian zoologist Fillipo de Fillipo.

Tahir, another one of his great-grandsons, dreams of opening a memorial in Galwan valley as a tribute to his great-grandfather. But he has concerns. “A lot of Chinese goods, such as electronics and apparel, reach Ladakh via Nepal. It’s time that we boycott such products and give a strong push to Indian brands,” the alumnus of Delhi University said, adding, “The Galwan valley will always remain ours.”

LIFE AND TIMES OF GHULAM RASUL GALWAN

Born in 1878, Galwan either led or was part of numerous expeditions into Tibet, Yarkand (now in the Uygur Autonomous Region of Xinjiang, China), the Karakoram range, the Pamirs and other Central Asian regions — mostly through inhospitable geographies with altitudes ranging from 5,000 m to 7,000 m above the sea level and where temperature plunged to -30 degree Celsius in the winter.

Galwan was forced to go on risky, long-distance expeditions at a young age, to supplement the income of his single mother, a winnower. But the path he chose due to compulsion, became a passion and he never looked back. Starting out as a porter and pony man, he rose through the ranks to eventually become the 'aksakal' or the chief assistant of the British joint commissioner at Leh.

He died at 47, in 1925 and appears to have been travelling nearly all of his relatively short life, with the legendary names of those times.

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