skip to content Search  | A-Z Directory  | Contacting People  | About Us Information Division
ePrints Repository University of Melbourne
 home about browse search register user help

University of Melbourne ePrints Repository

   

Waiting for the Esquimo: An historical and documentary study of the Cooch Behar enclaves of India and Bangladesh

Whyte, Dr Brendan (2002) Waiting for the Esquimo: An historical and documentary study of the Cooch Behar enclaves of India and Bangladesh. UNSPECIFIED, School of Anthropology, Geography and Environmental Studies, University of Melbourne.

Full text available as:
PDF - Requires Adobe Acrobat Reader or other PDF viewer.

Abstract

Enclaves are defined as a fragment of one country totally surrounded by one other. A list of the world's current enclaves and a review of the literature about them reveals a geographical bias that has left enclaves outside western Europe almost untouched. This bias is particularly noticeable in the almost complete absence of information on the Cooch Behar enclaves, along Bangladesh's northern border with India. The Cooch Behar enclaves number almost 200. This total includes about two dozen counter-enclaves (enclaves within enclaves), and the world's only counter-counter-enclave. Together, these enclaves represent 80% of the total number of enclaves existing in the world since the 1950s, and have been at the centre of Indo-East Pakistani and then Indo-Bangladeshi boundary disputes since Cooch Behar acceded to India in 1949.

The incredibly complex Cooch Behar sector of the Indo-Bangladesh boundary is investigated in detail for the first time, from historical, political and geographical perspectives. The history of the enclaves is traced, from their origin c.1713 until the present, in an attempt to understand their genesis and survival under a succession of states, from the Kingdom of Cooch Behar and the Mughal Empire in the 1700s, to Bangladesh and the Republic of India today. The difficulties of the enclaves' existence for their residents and the two countries today is contrasted with their peaceful, albeit administratively inconvenient, existence until 1947, to prove that the enclaves themselves are not the cause of border tensions in the area, but are rather a focus for other cross-border disputes.

The current situation of the enclaves is described, highlighting the abandonment of the enclave residents by each country, which refuse to allow the other to administer its exclaves. India's inability to implement a 1958 treaty with Pakistan, and its continued delay in ratifying a subsequent 1974 treaty with Bangladesh to exchange the enclaves is highlighted as the major factor impeding resolution of the enclave dispute. That the delays have been rooted in Indian internal politics is demonstrated.

Highly disparate official and media reports as to the number, area and population of the enclaves are analysed to determine the true extent of the enclave problem, and the first ever large-scale map of the enclaves is published, locating and naming each enclave.

Keywords:Political geography, India -- Boundaries -- Bangladesh, Bangladesh -- Boundaries -- India
Subjects:Arts > Department of Geography and Environmental Studies
ID Code:1443
Deposited By:INVALID USER
Deposited On:16 June 2006
Eprint Statistics:View statistics for this eprint
Item Type:Thesis