Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

India-nepal panel suggests open border regulation ›

- Anil Giri

The solution is not to close down the open border but to regulate it... The Indian side has already set up many border check posts to regulate the border, so it should be carried out on the Nepalese side too. BHEKH BAHADUR THAPA, EPG member

KATHMANDU: A panel created to review and update the entire gamut of India-nepal relations has agreed to recommend to both government­s the need to regulate the open border between the two countries.

A meeting in Kathmandu of the Eminent Persons Group (EPG) on Nepal-india Relations, which was formed in 2016, decided to recommend that both sides should regulate the border to control illegal and criminal activities without causing any difficulti­es for the public.

The EPG is mandated to suggest a new course for India-nepal ties to both government­s which takes into account the changed regional and global context.

The boundary, which runs along three sides of Nepal, is 1,850 km long and open. Travellers from both sides do not need visas.

The panel will suggest a way out on several issues pertaining to bilateral ties, including existing treaties, the open border, security, socio-cultural relations, trade, commerce and transit.

During the fifth meeting of the EPG that concluded on Sunday, BC Uprety from the Indian side made a detailed presentati­on on the open border.

“Both sides have agreed not to close the border but to instead issue some kind of identity card so that it would be easy to cross the border,” Bhekh Bahadur Thapa, the coordinato­r of the panel from the Nepalese side, told a news conference here.

Experts have pointed out that some travellers face discrimina­tion. Those who travel by air need a valid identity card issued by the government but no such provision is applicable to those who cross by land routes. Consultati­ons were going on about making it mandatory for those travelling by land routes to carry an identity card, Thapa said.

The Nepalese side is also pushing for a review and amendment of the Treaty of Peace and Friendship of 1950, considered the bedrock of India-nepal ties. The panel reportedly agreed to recommend to both government­s the scrapping of the treaty.

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