Dumchele

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Dumchele an entity of type: Thing

Dumcheleor Dhumtsele(Chinese: 都木契列; pinyin: Dōu mù qì liè, Tibetan: སྡུམ་མཚེས་ལེ་, Wylie: sdum mtshes le, THL: dum tsé lé)is a village and a grazing area near the Line of Actual Control between Ladakh and Tibet, administered by China since October 1962 but claimed by India. The locale is in the disputed Demchok sector, about 50 kilometers northwest from Demchok and 50 kilometers southeast of Chushul. It lies on a historic trade route between Ladakh and Rutog, with an erstwhile border pass at Chang La or Shingong La (Chinese: 新贡拉; pinyin: Xīn gòng lā) to the southeast of Dumchele. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Dumchele
rdf:langString Dumchele
xsd:float 33.07619857788086
xsd:float 79.16880035400391
xsd:integer 65726230
xsd:integer 1112828882
rdf:langString p
rdf:langString 都木契列
xsd:integer 4100
rdf:langString , 都木契列
rdf:langString Dumchele
rdf:langString Dhumtsele
rdf:langString Dōu mù qì liè
rdf:langString Jī gǔ nà lǔ hé
rdf:langString Xīn gòng lā
rdf:langString China Tibet#India Ladakh
rdf:langString dum tsé lé
rdf:langString Village
rdf:langString Country
rdf:langString Region
rdf:langString སྡུམ་མཚེས་ལེ་
rdf:langString 基古纳鲁河
rdf:langString 新贡拉
rdf:langString Dumchele
rdf:langString sdum mtshes le
xsd:string 33.0762 79.1688
rdf:langString Dumcheleor Dhumtsele(Chinese: 都木契列; pinyin: Dōu mù qì liè, Tibetan: སྡུམ་མཚེས་ལེ་, Wylie: sdum mtshes le, THL: dum tsé lé)is a village and a grazing area near the Line of Actual Control between Ladakh and Tibet, administered by China since October 1962 but claimed by India. The locale is in the disputed Demchok sector, about 50 kilometers northwest from Demchok and 50 kilometers southeast of Chushul. It lies on a historic trade route between Ladakh and Rutog, with an erstwhile border pass at Chang La or Shingong La (Chinese: 新贡拉; pinyin: Xīn gòng lā) to the southeast of Dumchele. A river flows below the Chang La pass, collecting mountain streams from the north. A rich grazing ground is formed near the pass, called Kigunaru,and the river itself is called Kigunaru river (Chinese: 基古纳鲁河; pinyin: Jī gǔ nà lǔ hé). It is also called Shingong Lungpa. Until 1962 India maintained a 'forward' post at Chang La, a day's march from Dumchele. In the 1962 war, China attacked the post and forced India to withdraw from the entire Kigunaru river basin. At the present time, China maintains a border trading market at Dumchele and a military post nearby.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 22793
xsd:double 4100.0
rdf:langString , 都木契列
xsd:string Dhumtsele
<Geometry> POINT(79.168800354004 33.076198577881)

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