Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Pak PM raises Kashmir, plugs Belt and Road in Nepal

- Anil Giri

KATHMANDU : The official reason for Pakistan Prime Minister Shahid Khaqan Abbasi’s visit to Nepal was to congratula­te his counterpar­t KP Sharma Oli on the successful conclusion of elections. But Abbasi’s discussion­s with his interlocut­ors showed the visit was about much more.

Abbasi made a concerted effort to give a new direction to Pakistan’s ties with Nepal during his two-day visit that ended on Tuesday, raising issues ranging from the holding of the much-delayed Saarc Summit to the situation in Kashmir, and plugging China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI).

He raised the “Kashmir issue and the ongoing human rights violations” in Jammu and Kashmir during his meeting with Oli, according to Pakistan’s state-run APP news agency.

He also made a strong push for Nepal’s support for holding the Saarc Summit in Islamabad, officials said. Abbasi said the full potential of Saarc was not being exploited and there is a “need to hold the next summit on priority basis”.

The summit was scheduled to be held in Islamabad in November 2016, when it was postponed after India and several other members of the grouping pulled out in the wake of terror attacks in Kashmir that were blamed on Pakistan-based groups.

India is taking part in Saarc meetings at various levels but has not given any signal about the hosting of the stalled summit. “The key question is whether India and Pakistan will be able to sort out their difference­s. It is very unlikely that the summit will take place soon,” said one Nepalese official.

Abbasi talked at length about the benefits of the BRI with Nepalese leaders and urged them to back the connectivi­ty project. He was also very vocal about Nepal taking advantage of the BRI in two interviews with the local media. “This is a project of a generation, a paradigm shift,” Abbasi said in an interview. “The whole region needs to connect into BRI, which will then open markets and opportunit­ies for us in the West and in Central Asia.”

One observer remarked that it appeared as if Abbasi was acting as a “Chinese spokespers­on and an emissary of the BRI”. Nepal has signed an MOU with China to become part of the BRI. There has been a big push from Beijing for Kathmandu to select projects for inclusion in the project.

 ?? AP ?? Newfound bonhomie
AP Newfound bonhomie

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