*The man who won **Tawang*

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 *Legendary Hero of Manipur in Peace and War*
*
He is a hero forgotten by his own countrymen.*
 *

But Ralengnao (Bob)
Khathing<http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/topic/Ralengnao-%28Bob%29-Khathing>,
an army officer from Manipur who joined the administrative services and
went on to become India's first ambassador to Myanmar, played an important
role in the history of India by bringing Tawang under New Delhi's control.*
 *
Many in Arunachal
Pradesh<http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/topic/Arunachal-Pradesh>
claim
it was "Khathing sahib" who brought Tawang under the Indian administration.
"Khathing is the first Indian officer to have hoisted the Tricolour there
in 1951, four years after Independence," saysDorjee
Khandu<http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/topic/Dorjee-Khandu>
Thongdok,
a former Arunachal minister who has written a book on the 1962 Sino-Indian
war.*
 *
"India and China had agreed in principle to determine the boundary on the
basis of the watershed. In other words, areas where rivers flowed from
South to North would be Tibet, while areas where rivers flowed from North
to South would be India. As the Sela river flows from the South to the
North, the Indian
government<http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/topic/Indian-Government>
initially
presumed Tawang was a part of Tibet. But when the Survey of India found the
Sela flowing back into India through Bhutan, Khathing acted quickly to
establish an Indian post in Tawang," says Thongdok.*
 *
The entire Tawang area south of the Sela Pass was under a vague Tibetan
administration till 1950. In 1951, Khathing made the Tawang expedition
without the nod of the Union external affairs ministry, which controlled
North Eastern Frontier Agency (NEFA). He had by then left the Army to join
the administrative services and was posted in NEFA. Reports quoting
Khathing say that during the autumn of 1950, he was summoned by the then
Assam governor, Jairamdas Daulatram, who gave him a secret file with orders
to bring Tawang under the Indian control.

*

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*Birth centenary of Major Ralengnao (Bob) Khathing at Mantripukri,*


 *























He made the expedition in January 1951 along with 200 Assam Rifles
soldiers. He was accompanied by Captain Hem Bahadur Limbu of the Assam
Rifles and a medical officer from the Army, Captain Modiero. The expedition
ended in the second week of February. According to a book by Neeru Nanda,
an IAS officer who was once posted in Tawang, Khathing was greeted warmly
by representatives of the Tawang monastery when he told them of the Indian
government's intention to establish a permanent office there. A few months
after this, the Chinese People's Liberation Army (PLA) landed in Lhasa,
Tibet.*
 *
When the Sino-Indian war broke out in October 1962, Tawang fell into the
hands of Chinese PLA within few days. Indian jawans fought the invaders
till the middle of November 1962 defending Bomdila, then the headquarters
of Kameng frontier division. In fact, Bomdila, which had come into
existence 10 years earlier, was raised by Khathing when he was the
assistant political officer of Kameng, from a forest area on Thong Ja
Mountain at 8500 feet. "Khathing stayed in tents for almost two years to
raise the town," says R K Nimai Singh, secretary to the governor of Manipur
and a close family friend of Khathing.*
 *Dorejee Tsering, a 63 years old Bomdila resident, said Khathing's
administrative skills and courageous move are still talked about in the
Tawang-Bomdila-Tenga areas of Arunachal Pradesh. His strategic thinking was
evident from the difficulty the Chinese PLA faced while capturing Bomdila.
It took the Chinese almost a month to accomplish this task. A place in
Bomdila is also called Khathing Point.*
 *
Born in Ukhrul district of Manipur in 1912, Khathing was from the Tangkhul
Naga tribe in the state. He was commissioned into the British Indian Army
in 1941 and inducted into the Indian Frontier Administrative
Service<http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/topic/Indian-Frontier-Administrative-Service>
in
1951. Major Khathing fought in World War
II<http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/topic/World-War-II> as
a part of the erstwhile 9/11 Hyderabad Regiment, and was awarded the
Military Cross and the Order of British Empire for his bravery.*
 *
"In 1947, when Maharaja Bodhchandra Singh of Manipur installed an interim
government while bringing in a democratic constitution in Manipur,
Khathing's close friend and the king's brother, Maharajkumar P B Singh,
made him the minister of forests and hill affairs," says N Joykumar Singh,
a history professor in Manipur University. Khathing also won the first
Manipur assembly election held in 1948 and continued to be minister under
chief minister Maharajkumar PB Singh. After the merger of Manipur into
India in October 1949, Khathing left
Imphal<http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/topic/Imphal> to
join the administrative services. He later became chief secretary of
Nagaland, was conferred the Padma Shri for his contribution in NEFA, and
went on to serve the first Indian ambassador to Myanmar in 1972.*
 *
Though Tawang and Bomdila still acknowledge Khathing's contribution, his
own state of Manipur has forgotten him. "Even in his native place Ukhrul,
Khathing is hardly remembered. May be it is because his stayed most of his
life outside the state," says Nimai Singh.*
 *
The illustrious man breathed his last in 1990 at his house in Imphal. He
suffered a stroke while meeting his best friend, the Maharajkumar, who
always called him Bob.*





-- 
With best wishes

S Chander

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