India’s Modi opens strategic tunnel to disputed frontier with China

Special India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi cuts a ribbon to inaugurate the Z-Morh or Sonamarg tunnel in India’s Jammu and Kashmir region on Jan. 13, 2025. (Press Information Bureau)
India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi cuts a ribbon to inaugurate the Z-Morh or Sonamarg tunnel in India’s Jammu and Kashmir region on Jan. 13, 2025. (Press Information Bureau)
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Updated 14 January 2025

India’s Modi opens strategic tunnel to disputed frontier with China

India’s PM Narendra Modi cuts a ribbon to inaugurate the Z-Morh or Sonamarg tunnel in India’s Jammu and Kashmir region.
  • New tunnel is part of a $932 million infrastructure project linking Kashmir with Ladakh
  • Last March, Modi also inaugurated a tunnel in disputed northeastern border state

NEW DELHI: India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi inaugurated on Monday a strategic Himalayan road tunnel that would give year-round accessibility to areas along the contested border with China.

The Sonamarg tunnel is part of a $932 million infrastructure project that helps connect Indian-administered Kashmir with Ladakh, a high-altitude, cold desert region nestled between India, Pakistan and China that has been the subject of territorial disputes for decades.

As the 6.4-km-long passage, also known as Z-Morh, stretches beneath a treacherous mountain pass cut off by snow for four to six months a year, it is expected to increase mobility in the region and allow rapid deployment of military supplies.

“With the opening of the tunnel here, connectivity will significantly improve and tourism will see a major boost in Jammu and Kashmir,” Modi said at the opening ceremony in Sonamarg.

The massive infrastructure project also includes a series of bridges, high mountain roads and a second tunnel — expected for completion in 2026 — of about 14 km that will bypass the challenging Zojila pass and connect Sonamarg with Ladakh.

“The inauguration of the tunnel ensures uninterrupted supply chains for military essentials, safeguarding lives by mitigating avalanche-related risks,” Minister of Road Transport and Highways Nitin Jairam Gadkari said.

India’s new tunnel opened amid an ongoing border dispute with China, which came to a head in 2020 following deadly clashes on their de facto Himalayan border known as the Line of Actual Control.

The conflict led the two countries to deploy thousands of troops to the area, as both sides stopped patrolling several points on the border in Ladakh to avoid new confrontations.

Last October, New Delhi and Beijing reached a deal to resolve the military stand-off after multiple high-level meetings aimed at resolving the conflict.

“India has been trying to reinforce its border network so that it is able to provide logistics support for the army and in the process also help civilians,” Prof. Noor Ahmad Baba from the political science department at the University of Kashmir told Arab News.

He said the tunnel is significant for its security and defense aspect and how it is improving connectivity to tourist spots like Sonamarg.

“(The tunnel) gives all-weather connectivity to the Ladakh region … which is a strategically significant region because of the continuous tension with China.”

India and China have been unable to agree on their 3,500-km border since they fought a war in 1962.

Last March, Modi inaugurated the Sela tunnel in the northeastern border state of Arunachal Pradesh, which the government has said will strengthen strategic capabilities along the LAC.


Trump to host his first summit with Central Asian leaders

Updated 9 sec ago

Trump to host his first summit with Central Asian leaders

Trump to host his first summit with Central Asian leaders
ALMATY: US President Donald Trump will host all five Central Asian leaders in Washington on Thursday for the first time, a few months after they held separate summits with Russia’s Vladimir Putin and China’s Xi Jinping.
The West has upped its interest with the resource-rich region, where Moscow’s traditional influence has been questioned since the Kremlin’s Ukraine invasion and where China is also a major player.

- Race for influence -

Since the Ukraine war, the leaders of Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan have stepped up contacts with other countries in the so-called “C5+1” format.
Washington and the European Union have intensified their diplomacy with the landlocked countries that gained independence from the Soviet Union in 1991, with a first US-Central Asia summit in 2023.
Russia, China, the West and Turkiye have all competed for influence in the resource-rich region.
This year, EU chief Ursula von der Leyen, Russian President Vladimir Putin and China’s leader Xi Jinping have all visited the region for summits with the five Central Asian leaders.
At the same time, ending most regional conflicts has enabled Central Asian countries to put on a united front in diplomacy.
China — which shares borders with Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan — has presented itself as a main commercial partner, investing in huge infrastructure projects.
The ex-Soviet republics still see Moscow as a strategic partner but have been spooked by Russia’s invasion of neighboring Ukraine.
Turkiye has built on its cultural ties with Central Asia and taken advantage of a distracted Russia to boost military and trade ties.
The West established some ties with the region in the early 2000s, when Western troops used bases in Central Asia during Afghanistan campaigns.

- Resource-rich region -

The United States and European Union are drawn by the region’s huge — but still mostly unexploited — natural resources as they try to diversify their rare earths supplies and reduce dependence on Beijing.
Other than rare earths, Kazakhstan is the world’s largest uranium producer, Uzbekistan has giant gold reserves and Turkmenistan is rich in gas. Mountainous Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan are also opening up new mineral deposits.
Russia remains firmly established in the region’s energy sector, supplying hydrocarbons through Soviet-era infrastructure and building nuclear plants.
Central Asia is also one of the world’s most polluted regions and hardest hit by climate change. All five countries have struggled with a shortage of water.

- Complicated logistics -

But exploiting these giant reserves remains complicated in the impoverished states with harsh and remote terrains.
Almost as large as the EU, but home to only about 75 million, Central Asia is landlocked and covered by deserts and mountains. It is sandwiched between countries that have strained ties with the West: Russia to the north, China to the east and Iran and Afghanistan to the south.
But, on the Silk Road for centuries, it is attempting to revive its historic role as a trading hub.
The five Central Asian states have forged several partnerships to break free from their dependence on Moscow.
Both Beijing and Brussels support the development of a transport route across the Caspian Sea that allows reaching Central Asia from Europe through the Caucasus, bypassing Russia.
Between 2021, shortly before Russia’s Ukraine invasion, and 2024, the transport of goods by this road saw a 660 percent increase, official statistics show.

- Muffled human rights -

For Trump, who has expressed admiration for hard-line regimes, economic cooperation with Central Asia has taken first place over promoting democratic values in the authoritarian countries.
While the region has opened up to tourism and foreign investment, rights groups have sounded the alarm over the further deterioration of civil freedoms.
Human Rights Watch has called on the United States to “ensure human rights are a key part of the agenda” during the summit.
“The summit is taking place while all participating governments have increased efforts to stifle dissent, silence the media, and retaliate against critics at home and abroad,” it said in a statement Monday.
Central Asian countries are ranked at the bottom of the Reporters Without Borders press freedom ranking, with Turkmenistan — one of the world’s most secretive states — ranked 174th out of 180 countries.
Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan had welcomed Trump’s order to dismantle US media outlet Radio Free Europe — one of the last sources of alternative information in Central Asia.