Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

India, Nepal ink key pacts on connectivi­ty, energy

- Rezaul H Laskar letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: India and Nepal on Saturday launched several connectivi­ty and energy cooperatio­n initiative­s, including a cross-border passenger train, even as Nepalese prime minister Sher Bahadur Deuba urged his Indian counterpar­t Narendra Modi to take steps to resolve a boundary dispute.

The Indian side made it clear both countries need to address the boundary issue through dialogue and to avoid politicisa­tion of such issues. The focus of the meeting between the two prime ministers was on developmen­tal cooperatio­n, including a joint vision statement for power cooperatio­n that envisages joint developmen­t of projects and transmissi­on infrastruc­ture.

Deuba arrived in New Delhi on Friday in his first bilateral visit abroad after becoming prime minister for the fifth time in July 2021.

On Sunday, Modi and Deuba launched the 35-km cross-border railway line linking Jaynagar in Bihar to Kurtha in Nepal and flagged off the inaugural run of a train with a capacity of 1,000 passengers. This is the first broad-gauge passenger rail link between the two sides and it will be extended to Bardibas in Nepal under a project supported by an Indian grant of ₹548 crore. The train will be operated by the Nepal Railway Company (NRC).

The Indian side also handed over the Solu Corridor, a 90-km, 132 kv power transmissi­on line built at a cost of ₹200 crore under an Indian line of credit. The line will help bring electricit­y to several remote districts in northeaste­rn Nepal by connecting them to the country’s national grid.

Modi and Deuba also launched India’s Rupay card in

Nepal. The domestic variant of the Rupay card will now work at 1,400 point-of-sale machines in Nepal, and the move is expected to facilitate bilateral tourist flows. Nepal is the fourth country, after Bhutan, Singapore and the UAE, where Rupay is live.

Nepal signed a framework agreement to join the India-led Internatio­nal Solar Alliance, and the two sides signed three more pacts – a memorandum of understand­ing (MOU) on enhancing technical cooperatio­n in the railways sector, and two agreements between Indian Oil Corporatio­n and Nepal Oil Corporatio­n for the supply of petroleum products for five years and for sharing of technical expertise.

The joint vision statement on power cooperatio­n committed the two sides to work for joint developmen­t of power generation projects in Nepal, developmen­t of cross-border transmissi­on infrastruc­ture, bi-directiona­l power trade based on market demand and coordinate­d operation of national grids. Nepal invited Indian firms to invest in developmen­t, constructi­on and operation of renewable and hydropower projects.

Addressing a joint media interactio­n with Modi, Deuba brought up the boundary issue, which had become a major irritant in bilateral ties under his predecesso­r, KP Sharma Oli. The previous Nepal government had issued a new political map and claimed the territorie­s of Kalapani, Limpiyadhu­ra and Lipulekh. “We discussed the boundary issue and I urged Modiji to resolve [it] through the establishm­ent of a bilateral mechanism,” he said.

Deuba noted that Nepal’s relations with India are “highly important” and said his country is “eager to benefit from India’s progress through a mutually beneficial economic partnershi­p”. He sought the enhancemen­t of cooperatio­n in civil aviation, including additional air routes, and the early delivery of 150,000 tonnes of chemical fertiliser­s by India.

Modi said India has been a “firm partner in the journey of peace, progress and developmen­t of Nepal and will always remain so”.

He said both leaders had agreed to give priority to trade and connectivi­ty initiative­s and also discussed the misuse of the open borders. “We stressed on maintainin­g close cooperatio­n between our defence and security institutio­ns,” he added.

Foreign secretary Harsh Shringla said the boundary and security issues were briefly discussed by the two sides. “There was a general understand­ing that both sides needed to address this in a responsibl­e manner through discussion and dialogue in the spirit of our close and friendly relations, and that politicisa­tion of such issues needs to be avoided,” he told a media briefing after the talks.

As with all neighbours, there were some outstandin­g issues on the table between India and Nepal, and “what is important between close and friendly neighbours is that you have the ability to...discuss and sort out these issues in a manner that is satisfacto­ry to both sides”, Shringla said.

 ?? ARVIND YADAV/HT ?? Prime Minister Narendra Modi with his Nepalese counterpar­t Sher Bahadur Deuba, in New Delhi on Saturday.
ARVIND YADAV/HT Prime Minister Narendra Modi with his Nepalese counterpar­t Sher Bahadur Deuba, in New Delhi on Saturday.

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