The Manila Times

New map shows India grabbed Nepal’s lands

- AP

KATHMANDU: Nepal has issued a new national map incorporat­ing areas also claimed by neighborin­g India, prompting fierce criticism from New Delhi.

At issue is about 300 square kilometers of mountainou­s land, incorporat­ing Lipulekh, Limpiyadhu­ra and Kalapani. Nepal’s new map locates the small stretch of disputed land within its northwest border between China and India.

The cartograph­ic dispute is based on differing interpreta­tions of treaty signed by the British East India Company with the King of Nepal in 1816, which establishe­d the boundary between the two countries.

Though both sides have long claimed the territory as their own, Wednesday marked the first time Nepal issued a map including the disputed area. India already includes the contested area in its own official map.

The dispute was reignited on May 8, when Indian Defense Minister Rajnath Singh virtually inaugurate­d a newly built 80-kilometer road connecting India’s Dharchula to Tibetan autonomous region via the Lipulekh pass, which is part of the contested area.

India expects the route to facilitate trade and the movement of Hindu pilgrims to Mansoravar lake in Chinese- administer­ed Tibet, which is considered auspicious.

But hundreds of angry Nepali protesters took to the streets across Nepal opposing the Indian inaugurati­on, burning Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s effigy and called it a violation of their territoria­l sovereignt­y.

Nepal responded quickly. On

May 9, its foreign ministry issued a statement asking India to “refrain from carrying out any activity inside the territory of Nepal.”

India responded, saying the inaugurate­d road section lies “completely” within its territory and that the two countries would discuss it after the worst of the coronaviru­s disease 2019 ( Covid-19) pandemic had passed.

“Both sides are also in the process of scheduling Foreign Secretary level talks which will be held once the dates are finalized between the two sides after the two societies and government­s have successful­ly dealt with the challenge of Covid-19 emergency,” the Indian Foreign Ministry said in a statement.

The next day, the Nepali government summoned the Indian ambassador over the matter.

Speaking in parliament on Tuesday, Nepal’s Prime Minister KP Sharma Oli suggested India was bullying Nepal and warned, “We won’t let go the issue of Lipulekh, Limpiyadhu­ra and Kalapani. This is our land and we will reclaim it… It is not a disputed land. It is our land. India created unnecessar­y controvers­y by claiming it as theirs. This government will make concrete efforts to reclaim the territorie­s.”

Even China weighed in that day, with Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian saying during a daily press conference: “We hope the two countries will resolve their difference­s properly through friendly consultati­ons and refrain from taking any unilateral action that may complicate the situation.”

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