Hindustan Times (Delhi)

India must review its policy on Nepal

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Kathmandu’s increased economic dependence on China is worrying

It has been a busy fortnight on the India-nepal diplomatic front. Prime Minister Narendra Modi visited Kathmandu for the Bimstec summit at the end of August and had what was billed as an extremely warm and productive bilateral conversati­on with Prime Minister KP Oli. The ruling Nepal Communist Party chair, Pushpa Kamal Dahal ‘Prachanda’ (Mr Oli is the other chair of the party), visited New Delhi over the weekend and said he was touched by the honour bestowed on him here.

But there were two decisions which emerged as disturbing signals for New Delhi. Nepal signed an additional protocol on transit with China, which would give the country an access to Chinese ports. The fact that this happened within an overall context of China’s increased political and economic presence in Nepal raised eyebrows in New Delhi. Second, Nepal — after having signed on to a joint military exercise of Bimstec, which kicked off in Pune on Monday — pulled out because of an internal political criticism. So what is going on? Is there warmth and cordiality or distance and a chill in India-nepal ties? To understand this, it is important to go back to the Nepal elections of late 2017. The Left Front of Mr Oli and Mr Prachanda won the polls on a strong nationalis­t platform — with the declared intent of redefining the “special relationsh­ip” with India, which meant diminishin­g ties with India, but deepening it with China. New Delhi went out of its way to warm to Mr Oli, and reassure him that India will not undermine the government.

So there was a normalisat­ion in bilateral ties, but only because India substantia­lly narrowed down the manner in which it defined its interests in Nepal. New Delhi can pretend that there is no problem. But till it reviews its Nepal policy, even as the warmth for public consumptio­n will continue, the tensions, beneath the surface, will continue to deepen.

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