Kongka Pass
| Kongka Pass | |
|---|---|
| Standard Tibetan: དགུན་ཁ་ལ | |
Kongka Pass Kongka Pass Kongka Pass | |
| Elevation | 5,171 m (16,965 ft) |
| Location | India–China border |
| Range | Karakoram |
| Coordinates | 34°20′06″N 79°02′07″E / 34.335°N 79.0353°E |
| Kongka Pass | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Traditional Chinese | 空喀山口 | ||||||
| Simplified Chinese | 空喀山口 | ||||||
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The Kongka Pass or Kongka La (Tibetan: དགུན་ཁ་ལ, Wylie: dgun kha la, THL: gün kha la) is a low mountain pass on the Line of Actual Control between India and China in eastern Ladakh. It lies on a spur of the Karakoram range that intrudes into the Chang Chenmo Valley adjacent to the disputed Aksai Chin region. China claimed the location as its border in a 1956 map, and attacked an Indian patrol party in 1959 killing ten policemen and apprehending ten others. Known as the Kongka Pass incident, the event was a milestone in the escalation of the border dispute between the two countries.