http://arabnews.com/china-puts-himalayan-claims-passport-map-india-maps-its-own



China puts Himalayan claims on passport map, India maps its own
  a..  
  A woman holds a Chinese passport, displaying a Chinese map which includes an 
area in the South China Sea inside a line of dashes representing maritime 
territory claimed by China (L, top) and a picture of Beijing's Tiananmen Square 
(bottom), at an office in Wuhan airport, Hubei province, Friday. (Reuters)


Frank Jack Daniel | Reuters

Friday 23 November 2012


NEW DELHI: India is stamping its own map on visas it issues to holders of new 
Chinese passports that contain a map depicting disputed territory within 
China’s borders, the latest twist in tension in Asia over China’s territorial 
claims.
China’s new microchip-equipped passports contain a map that marks its claims 
over disputed waters and also show as its territory two Himalayan regions that 
India also claims.
The map means countries disputing the Chinese claims will have to stamp 
microchip-equipped passports of countless visitors, in effect acquiescing to 
the Chinese point of view.
In response, India is issuing visas stamped with its own version of the 
borders, sources with knowledge of the dispute told Reuters.
“The correct map of India is stamped on to visas being issued on such 
passports,” said one of the sources, who declined to be identified.
China’s long-standing territorial disputes with Japan and Southeast Asian 
neighbors have grown heated in recent months.
On Thursday, the Philippines responded angrily to the new passports, saying 
Chinese carrying the document would be violating Philippine national 
sovereignty.
India and China fought a brief, high-altitude border war in 1962.
The nuclear-armed neighbors have held multiple rounds of talks to resolve their 
disputed Aksai Chin and Arunachal Pradesh regions where they fought the war but 
have made little progress.
In Beijing, Chinese Foreign Ministry Hua Chunying told a daily news briefing 
that China has selected the maps as background on the inside pages of the 
passports issued by the Ministry of Public Security in May.
“The design is not targeting a specific country,” Hua said. “We hope that the 
relevant countries take a rational and sensible attitude ... to avoid causing 
interference with normal Sino-foreign personnel exchanges.”


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