The “Chicken’s Neck”, or Siliguri Corridor, was created in the aftermath of Partition. Just 22 kilometres wide at its narrowest point and roughly 60 kilometres long, it connects India’s northeast to the rest of the country. Bordering Bangladesh and Bhutan and with China in close proximity, security theorists have long worried that this strategically vital region, could be severed and India’s northeast rendered landlocked in the event of conflict. In some sectors, Indian and Chinese troops are stationed just 30 metres apart, the closest proximity anywhere along the entire Sino-Indian border. How this strip of border was created, and how it has been shaped by recent politics, is the topic of In the Margins of Empires: A History of the Chicken’s Neck by Akhilesh Upadhyay.
You must be logged in to post a comment.