Also known as Dohogram
Dahagram–Angarpota is a Bangladeshi enclave in India about away from the border of Bangladesh. It had a population of 17,000 people in 2014. Dahagram–Angarpota was the second-largest enclave and the largest Bangladeshi enclave among historical Indo-Bangladesh enclaves, and it is the only remaining enclave left after a land swap in 2015. It is connected to mainland Bangladesh by the Tin Bigha Corridor, which is situated in Patgram Upazila of Lamonirhat district. It is surrounded by Cooch Behar district of India's West Bengal state. The Teesta river flows on its western side.
Dahagram–Angarpota is a Bangladeshi enclave in India about away from the border of Bangladesh. It had a population of 17,000 people in 2014. Dahagram–Angarpota was the second-largest enclave and the largest Bangladeshi enclave among historical Indo-Bangladesh enclaves, and it is the only remaining enclave left after a land swap in 2015. It is connected to mainland Bangladesh by the Tin Bigha Corridor, which is situated in Patgram Upazila of Lamonirhat district. It is surrounded by Cooch Behar district of India's West Bengal state. The Teesta river flows on its western side.
==History== In 1954 Pakistan and India signed a treaty over the Dahagram–Angarpota and Berubari enclaves. Dahagram–Angarpota, according to the treaty, was meant to go to Pakistan, while Berubari was to be divided, with North Berubari going to India and South Berubari to Pakistan. However, the treaty was not ratified as it faced legal challenges in India.
2 mapped locations
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).