Nima-odsor
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Nima-odsor (1894 – 23 January 1936), also known under the Chinese name of Ni Kuan-chou () was a Mongol politician active in the
Republic of China Taiwan, officially the Republic of China (ROC), is a country in East Asia, at the junction of the East and South China Seas in the northwestern Pacific Ocean, with the People's Republic of China (PRC) to the northwest, Japan to the northeast ...
who was shot to death by Japanese assassins on an intercity bus ride.


Career

Nima-odsor was a member of the Central Committee of the Kuomintang and of the
Mongol Local Autonomy Political Affairs Committee The Mongol Local Autonomy Political Affairs Committee (蒙古地方自治政務委員會), also referred to as the Pailingmiao Council or Peilingmiao Council, was a political body of ethnic Mongols in the Chinese Republic. The Nationalist governm ...
. He was a close associate of
Ünenbayan Wu Heling (1896–1980) was a politician in the Republic of China. He was born in Hortin Right Banner, Zhelimu League (now Horqin District, Tongliao), Inner Mongolia. His Mongolian name was Ünenbayan.. His name is usually transcribed into Chines ...
and
Jodbajab Jodbajab; (1873 or 1877 – 1945), also known under the courtesy name of Shih Hai () was an Inner Mongolian military officer and government official during the late Qing dynasty and Mengjiang governments. He was an ethnic Mongol belonging to ...
. In January 1936, Nima-odsor, Ünenbayan,
Serengdongrub Serengdongrub (17 February 1894 – 2 August 1980), courtesy name Chü Ch'uan () and also known under the Chinese name of Pai Yün-t'i (), was an Inner Mongolian politician in the Republic of China. An ethnic Mongol, he was a native of Harqin ...
, and Demchugdongrub went to Zhangbei for a meeting with Jodbajab. In that meeting, they discussed Jodbajab's deployment of cavalry police in six counties in northern Chahar Province (demilitarised by the
Chin–Doihara Agreement The Chin–Doihara Agreement (; ja, 土肥原・秦徳純協定, Doihara-Qín Déchún) was a treaty that resolved the North Chahar Incident of 27 June 1935 between the Empire of Japan and Republic of China. The agreement was made between Kwant ...
in the wake of the North Chahar Incident) in response to Manchukuo troops' occupation of the area under
Li Shouxin Li Shouxin ( mn, , Буяндэлгэр; ; Hepburn: ''Ri Shyushin''; July 11, 1892 - May 1970) was a pro-Japanese commander in the Manchukuo Imperial Army and later the Mengjiang National Army. Biography Li was born into a family of minor lan ...
the previous month. After the meeting ended, on 23 January Nima-odsor took a bus to return to Kalgan; gunmen in civilian clothes stopped the bus, boarded it, identified Nima-odsor, shot him at point blank range, and then fled without harming any other passengers. The Japanese denied any connection and claimed it had been done by Chinese agents. Newspaper reports at the time suggested Nima-odsor thought that Jodbajab had exceeded his authority and that there might be some conflict between the two. Later scholarly sources conclude that the assassination was a Japanese plot in response to Nima-odsor's Mongol nationalism and opposition to Japanese expansionism. In the aftermath, Demchugdongrub, who had been working with the Japanese, stated that he knew in advance of a (failed) Japanese plot to assassinate Ünenbayan, but the assassination of Nima-odsor came as a complete surprise to him, because he thought the latter would be protected by Jodbajab. The most notable consequence of Nima-odsor's assassination was that his friend Jodbajab was intimidated into further cooperation with the Japanese, and joined Demchugdongrub's
Mongol Military Government Mengjiang, also known as Mengkiang or the Mongol Border Land, and governed as the Mengjiang United Autonomous Government, was an autonomous area in Inner Mongolia, formed in 1939 as a puppet state of the Empire of Japan, then from 1940 being ...
soon after.


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References


Bibliography

* * *{{citation, author=张永昌 — Zhang Yongchang, author2=张翔鹰 — Zhang Xiangying, year=2006, chapter=吴鹤龄死里终逃生 尼冠洲大意误失命 — Ünenbayan escapes death, Nima-odsor loses his life, title=''末代王爷传奇'' — Biographies of royals at the end of an era, publisher=作家出版社 — Writers' Publishing House, isbn=978-7-5063-3730-4, ref=CITEREFZhangZhang2006 1894 births 1936 deaths Republic of China politicians from Inner Mongolia Political office-holders in Inner Mongolia Members of the Kuomintang Politicians assassinated in the 1930s Chinese politicians assassinated in the 20th century 20th-century Chinese politicians