China rejects the Simla Accord, contending that the Tibetan government was not sovereign and therefore did not have the power to conclude treaties.
In 1938, the British published the Simla Accord in Aitchison's Treaties.
The 1914 Simla Accord defined the McMahon Line as the new boundary between British India and Tibet.
Simla Accord (1913) was a treaty between Britain and Tibet signed in 1914 at the end of a convention held in Shimla.
In 1913-1914 representatives of China, Tibet and Britain negotiated a treaty in India: the Simla Accord.
Pakistan was said to have insisted that both sides should revert to positions held in December 1971 as agreed in the Simla Accord [see pp. 25432-33].
Simla Accord (1914), signed in 1914, to purported to settle a dispute over the boundary line between inner and outer Tibet.
Simla Accord (1914), the disputed outcome of a convention held at Simla which lasted from 1913 to 1914.
Later, Britain defined the Indo-Tibetan border at the 1914 Simla Accord with the McMahon Line.
In 1914, British India and Tibet agreed on the McMahon Line, as part of the Simla Accord.