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      • The so-called McMahon Line was a product of the British policy of aggression against the Tibet Region of China -and has never been recognized by any Chinese Central Government and is therefore decidedly illegal.
      www.indiawrites.org/diplomacy/the-mcmahon-line-a-hundred-years-on/
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  2. China considers the McMahon Line illegal and unacceptable claiming that Tibetan representatives who had signed the 1914 Convention held in Shimla which delineated the McMahon line on the map were not having the right to do so.

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  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › McMahon_LineMcMahon Line - Wikipedia

    The McMahon Line forms the basis of the Line of Actual Control and the northern boundary of Arunachal Pradesh (shown in red) in the eastern Himalayas administered by India but claimed by China. The area was the eastern sector of the 1962 Sino-Indian War.

  4. McMahon Line, frontier between Tibet and Assam in British India, negotiated between Tibet and Great Britain at the end of the Shimla Conference (October 1913–July 1914) and named for the chief British negotiator, Sir Henry McMahon.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  5. done and "the so-called McMahon Line was a product of the British policy of aggression against the Tibetan Region of China and has never been recognized by any Chinese Central Government and is therefore decidedly illegal."2 In that letter Mr. Chou laid claim to a large portion of the Indian territory.

  6. Jul 6, 2014 · The so-called McMahon Line was a product of the British policy of aggression against the Tibet Region of China -and has never been recognized by any Chinese Central Government and is therefore decidedly illegal.

  7. Sep 20, 2024 · McMahon line is a boundary line drawn between Tibet and North-East Frontier Agency in northeastern India. India recognizes the McMahon Line as its legal border which includes the state of Arunachal Pradesh.

  8. Jul 24, 2021 · On the other hand, India has considered the McMahon Line as its legal national border since its inception in 1914. In response to China’s argument, India claimed that China had no authority over Tibet when the British drew the McMahon Line.