South Tibet
| Cultural/historical Tibet (highlighted) depicted with various competing territorial claims. |
|
| | | | | | | Claimed by Tibetan exile groups. |
| width=10px bgcolor=#ff9f40 | width=10px bgcolor=#ffff40 | width=10px bgcolor=#40ff40 | width=10px bgcolor=#40ffff | width=10px | bgcolor=#eeeeee | Tibetan areas designated by PRC. |
| width=10px | width=10px bgcolor=#ffff40 | width=10px bgcolor=#40ff40 | width=10px | width=10px | bgcolor=#eeeeee | Tibet Autonomous Region (actual control). |
| width=10px | width=10px | width=10px bgcolor=#40ff40 | width=10px | width=10px | bgcolor=#eeeeee | Claimed by India as part of Aksai Chin. |
| width=10px | width=10px | width=10px | width=10px bgcolor=#40ffff | width=10px | bgcolor=#eeeeee | Claimed by the PRC as part of TAR. |
| width=10px | width=10px | width=10px | width=10px | width=10px bgcolor=#4040ff | bgcolor=#eeeeee | Other historically culturally-Tibetan areas. |
South Tibet is a political term encompassing a mountainous area of the
Himalayas, claimed by the
People's Republic of China but not adminstered as a sub-administration of the
Tibet Autonomous Region. After the
Sino-Indian War, it roughly corresponds to the presently
Indian-administered state of
Arunachal Pradesh. The usage of the term is not seen as
politically correct by many people.
Some people may regard the term "South Tibet" as a Chinese word invention. But historically, this area had close relationship with
Tibetan people and
Tibetan culture.
Most of the people living in South Tibet are either of
Tibetan or
Thai-
Burmese origin (see the
demographics of Arunachal Pradesh for more detail). Another 35% of the population are immigrants, including 30,000
Bangladeshi and
Chakma expatriates, and immigrants from other parts of India, notably
Assam and
Nagaland.
Tsangyang Gyatso, 6th Dalai Lama was born in
Tawang.
*
Arunachal Pradesh