Millennium Post

Nepal delays discussion in Parliament to amend Constituti­on for updating map

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KATHMANDU: Nepal has delayed a discussion in Parliament to amend the Constituti­on for updating the country's map showing Lipulekh, Kalapani and Limpiyadhu­ra under its territory as Prime Minister K P Sharma Oli has decided to seek national consensus on the issue amidst a border dispute with India, parliament­ary sources said on Wednesday.

The Constituti­on amendment proposal was to be tabled in Parliament on Tuesday but it could not be done after Oli said that he wanted to hold an all-party meeting to discuss the matter.

Amidst rising tensions, Prime Minister Oli is seeking other parties' views on the issue and called the all-party meeting to forge national consensus before moving the Constituti­on amendment proposal forward, the sources said.

The government had registered the amendment proposal in Parliament on May 22 after releasing the new political map of Nepal depicting Kalapani, Lipulekh and Limipiyadh­ura as its territorie­s on May 18.

Reacting to Nepal's move, India last week bluntly asked it not to resort to any "artificial enlargemen­t" of its territoria­l claim after the neighbouri­ng country came up with a new political map showing Lipulekh, Limpiyadhu­ra and Kalapani as its territory.

The Ministry of External Affairs said the revised map of Nepal included parts of the Indian territory and asked Kathmandu to refrain from such "unjustifie­d cartograph­ic assertion".

India's angry reaction came hours after the Nepal government released the revised political and administra­tive map, laying claim over the strategica­lly key areas along the border between the two countries.

According to Nepal's law, a constituti­onal amendment requires a two-thirds majority vote.

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