
The Siliguri Corridor, or 'Chicken's Neck,' a narrow land strip connecting mainland India to its northeastern states, was formed by the 1947 partition. Its creation, influenced by demographic and pragmatic factors like river headwaters and jute mill connectivity, resulted in a strategic bottleneck. This 20-22 km wide corridor is India's sole land bridge to its eight northeastern states, highlighting its immense geopolitical significance.