Neighbourhood Relations

Indian & World Geography
Constitution VerifiedUPSC Verified
Version 1Updated 5 Mar 2026

Article 51 of the Indian Constitution under Directive Principles of State Policy states: 'The State shall endeavour to promote international peace and security; maintain just and honourable relations between nations; foster respect for international law and treaty obligations in the dealings of organised peoples with one another; and encourage settlement of international disputes by arbitration.' …

Quick Summary

India's neighbourhood relations encompass diplomatic, economic, and security relationships with eight immediate neighbours (Pakistan, China, Nepal, Bhutan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Myanmar, Afghanistan) and maritime neighbours like Maldives.

Guided by constitutional Article 51's directive to promote international peace, the policy has evolved through various doctrines: Nehru's Panchsheel, Indira Doctrine, Gujral Doctrine emphasizing unilateral concessions, and current Neighbourhood First Policy prioritizing immediate neighbours.

Key multilateral frameworks include SAARC (established 1985, hampered by India-Pakistan tensions) and BIMSTEC (formed 1997, connecting South and Southeast Asia). Major challenges include unresolved territorial disputes (China border, Kashmir), cross-border terrorism from Pakistan, water sharing conflicts (Indus, Teesta, Brahmaputra), and China's growing influence through Belt and Road Initiative.

Opportunities exist in economic integration, connectivity projects like BBIN Motor Vehicle Agreement, shared challenges requiring collective responses (climate change, pandemics), and cultural connections facilitating people-to-people ties.

Success stories include India-Bangladesh Land Boundary Agreement (2015), India-Bhutan hydropower cooperation, and post-war reconstruction assistance to Sri Lanka. Current priorities focus on development partnerships, digital connectivity, disaster management cooperation, and countering great power competition while maintaining strategic autonomy.

The neighbourhood remains central to India's great power aspirations, requiring sustained engagement despite periodic setbacks and domestic political constraints.

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  • 8 immediate neighbours: Pakistan, China, Nepal, Bhutan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Myanmar, Afghanistan
  • SAARC: 8 members, 1985, Kathmandu secretariat
  • BIMSTEC: 7 members, 1997, Dhaka secretariat
  • Key policies: Gujral Doctrine, Neighbourhood First Policy, SAGAR vision
  • Major disputes: China border (LAC), Kashmir, water sharing (Indus, Teesta)
  • Constitutional basis: Article 51 (international peace), 100th Amendment (LBA)
  • Current challenges: Cross-border terrorism, great power competition, connectivity gaps

Vyyuha Quick Recall - 'NEPAL BISCUIT': N(epal), E(ast-Myanmar), P(akistan), A(fghanistan), L(anka) + B(angladesh), I(ndia), S(AAR), C(hina), U(nited in BIMSTEC), I(ndus Waters), T(eesta dispute). Remember SAARC as 'South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation' with 8 members since 1985 in Kathmandu, while BIMSTEC 'Bay of Bengal Initiative' has 7 members since 1997 in Dhaka.

For policies: 'Gujral's 5 Generous Gifts' (unilateral concessions, no reciprocity, non-interference, peaceful resolution, bilateral solutions) vs 'Neighbourhood First = Development First' (current policy).

Border mnemonic: 'Pakistan-China-Nepal-Bhutan-Bangladesh-Myanmar-Afghanistan' = 'PC NBBA' (Personal Computer Needs Better Broadband Always).

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