Hindustan Times (Noida)

India assures Nepal on vaccines, supply schedule likely next week

- Shishir Gupta letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEPAL’S DRUG REGULATOR APPROVED EMERGENCY USE OF COVISHIELD VACCINE DURING NEPALESE FOREIGN MINISTER PRADEEP GYAWALI’S VISIT TO INDIA

NEW DELHI: The Narendra Modi government has given ironclad assurances to Nepal that it will be among the first countries to receive a pair of Covid-19 vaccines being manufactur­ed in India, the supply schedule for which will be announced this week. The assurance was conveyed to Nepalese foreign minister Pradeep Gyawali during his visit to New Delhi for the Joint Commission Meeting with external affairs minister Subrahmany­am Jaishankar.

While the political detractors of Nepal Prime Minister Khadga Prasad Sharma Oli had portrayed Gyawali’s visit as a damp squib, fact is that interlocut­ors of the Nepalese foreign minister in New Delhi were impressed by the profession­alism and sobriety with which he approached the bilateral relationsh­ip with India.

Gyawali could not meet Prime Minister Narendra Modi as the Indian PM was totally involved in the launch of the Covid-19 vaccinatio­n drive on January 16, according to top government officials. It was only due to the PM’S prior commitment­s that Gyawali was received by defence minister Rajnath Singh, who is number two in the Modi government.

It is understood that India will be taking care of emergency requiremen­ts of its friends by supplying vaccines for restricted use to priority countries in the neighbourh­ood like Bhutan, Bangladesh, Myanmar and the Maldives apart from Nepal with the supply schedule being worked out now.

According to government interlocut­ors, Gyawali briefed Jaishankar about the preparedne­ss of Nepal to receive the vaccines being manufactur­ed in India. Nepal’s drug regulator approved emergency use of the Covishield vaccine being manufactur­ed by the Serum Institute of India during the foreign minister’s visit to India.

The two countries are now on the way of discussing training of medical modules, who will vaccinate Nepalese front-line workers during the restricted use period. Nepal has a total of 267,056 Covid-19 cases with as many as 1,954 people losing their lives to the pandemic, which originated in China at the end of 2019.

During Gyawali’s visit, the two sides agreed to gradually open the air and land route connectivi­ty, which had been hit by the pandemic. The two countries also agreed to expedite the field location survey related to the Raxaul-kathmandu railway line.

While India and Nepal decided to deepen defence cooperatio­n through closer militaryto-military links, Rajnath Singh also offered to provide humanitari­an assistance and disaster relief training and capacity building to the Oli government.

“There were no acrimoniou­s notes during Gyawali’s visit, with the visitor taking a very responsibl­e view of the bilateral relationsh­ip,” said an officials present in the bilateral meetings, requesting anonymity.

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