The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

Xi becomes 1st Chinese president in 2 decades to visit Nepal

- By Roshan Sedhai The Associated Press

KATHMANDU, NEPAL >> Xi Jinping on Saturday became the first Chinese president in more than two decades to visit Nepal, where he is expected to sign agreements on several infrastruc­ture projects.

Xi arrived Saturday from India, where he met with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi. Nepal is expected to tread cautiously while building relations with big neighbors India and China.

India has extensive influence on Nepal’s economy and politics, while China and Nepal share a border covered with high mountain peaks.

Jiang Zemin had been the last Chinese president to visit Nepal, making the trip in 1996, but other Chinese leaders — including premiers and foreign ministers — have since paid official visits to the Himalayan nation.

Tanka Prasad Karki, a former Nepalese diplomat, said that a Chinese president had not visited Nepal in such a long time because “China was waiting for a strong government in Kathmandu, as the last few decades were marked by a Maoist war, frequent changes of government and political instabilit­y.”

Xi was received by Nepalese President Bidhya Devi Bhandari and Prime Minister K.P. Sharma Oli at the Kathmandu airport.

Trans-Himalayan connectivi­ty and an extraditio­n treaty will be high on the agenda during official talks on Sunday, said Narayan Kaji Shreshta, a spokesman for the ruling Nepal Communist Party. He said the countries are also expected to sign a project report on constructi­ng a rail link between Kathmandu and Keirung in Tibet.

Nepalese officials ruled out the possibilit­y of any immediate agreement on the extraditio­n issue. China has been pressing Nepal to sign the treaty for some years to improve administra­tion of border areas and fight against illegal border crossing and transnatio­nal crimes like banking fraud, traffickin­g and the smuggling of gold and wildlife parts, Nepalese officials said.

Police said they had arrested 22 people, including some Tibetan refugees, since Friday to prevent any protests during Xi’s visit.

Xi’s two-day visit to India came at a time of tensions over Beijing’s support for Pakistan, India’s archrival, in opposing New Delhi’s downgradin­g of Kashmir’s semi-autonomy and continuing restrictio­ns in the disputed region.

Indian Prime Minister Modi told Xi on Saturday that relations between their countries had attained stability and momentum in the past year, and that it should enable them to manage their difference­s and avoid disputes.

The two leaders avoided the vexed Kashmir dispute from clouding their summit in the seaside temple town of Mamallapur­am. Modi said both countries agreed to be sensitive to each other’s concerns as they held delegation-level talks.

Indian Foreign Secretary Vijay Gokhale said the two countries decided to set up a group at the finance ministers’ level to discuss trade and investment issues, especially India’s whopping $63 billion trade deficit with China.

According to India’s Commerce Ministry, India’s exports to China amounted to $13.33 billion in the 2018 financial year, compared with imports of $76.38 billion.

Tensions in Kashmir, which is divided between Pakistan and India but claimed by both in its entirety, have escalated since August, when India downgraded the semi-autonomy of Indian-administer­ed Kashmir and imposed a security and communicat­ions lockdown.

China supported Pakistan in raising India’s actions at the U.N. General Assembly meeting in New York. China said India should not act unilateral­ly in Kashmir, a portion of which China also controls.

Xi arrived in India two days after hosting Pakistani Prime Minister Khan in Beijing.

India accuses neighborin­g Pakistan of arming and training insurgent groups fighting for Kashmir’s independen­ce or its merger with Pakistan. Pakistan Texas, South Carolina, Massachuse­tts and New Jersey.

The Pit Stop was founded in 1954 by the late Carl Nosal, a member of Bud Tingelstad­t’s pit crew in the Indianapol­is 500. It featured an auto racing theme for more than 60 years.

The previous owners changed the restaurant’s name to Decades Speakeasy and gave it a Prohibitio­n-era speakeasy theme in March.

Previously, the bar area was primarily used as a waiting area for the dining room, and customers mostly did not spend much time at the bar.

Bauer and Haschak knocked out a wall to expand the area and extended the bar in an effort to make it a more inviting place where people would want to spend time.

“We’re trying to make it a local hangout, with upscale dinner,” Haschak said. will gave the stepdaught­ers some justice.

Green is careful to protect people’s privacy, but the drama she chronicles should be the needed push that gets you to do some estate planning.

The book covers the basics, and there’s a companion workbook where folks can list important informatio­n, such as the location of a will or insurance policy. But Green’s ultimate goal is to motivate you to act — and now.

Recently Green coordinate­d an exit plan symposium at our church that drew about 1,300 people. denies the charge. The two countries have fought two wars over the region’s control

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You will die. Don’t exit leaving a hot mess behind.

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I’m hosting an online chat about the “My Exit Plan” at 12 p.m. on Oct. 30 at washington­post.com/ discussion­s. Green will join me to answer questions about getting your own house in order. Readers can write to since they won independen­ce from British colonialis­ts in 1947. Michelle Singletary c/o The Washington Post, 1301 K St., N.W., Washington, D.C. 20071. Her email address is michelle. singletary@washpost. com. Follow her on Twitter (@Singletary­M) or Facebook (www.facebook. com/MichelleSi­ngletary). Comments and questions are welcome, but due to the volume of mail, personal responses may not be possible. Please also note comments or questions may be used in a future column, with the writer’s name, unless a specific request to do otherwise is indicated.

 ?? NIRANJAN SHRESTHA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Government officers hold Chinese and Nepalese flag as they wait to welcome Chinese president Xi Jinping in Kathmandu, Nepal, Saturday. Xi has become the first Chinese president in more than two decades to visit Nepal, where he’s expected to sign agreements on major infrastruc­ture projects.
NIRANJAN SHRESTHA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Government officers hold Chinese and Nepalese flag as they wait to welcome Chinese president Xi Jinping in Kathmandu, Nepal, Saturday. Xi has become the first Chinese president in more than two decades to visit Nepal, where he’s expected to sign agreements on major infrastruc­ture projects.
 ?? NIRANJAN SHRESTHA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A Nepalese man holds Chinese and Nepalese flags as he waits to welcome Chinese president Xi Jinping in Kathmandu, Nepal, Saturday. Xi arrived Saturday from New Delhi, where he met with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi. He was received by Nepalese President Bidhya Devi Bhandari and Prime Minister K.P. Sharma Oli at the Kathmandu airport.
NIRANJAN SHRESTHA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A Nepalese man holds Chinese and Nepalese flags as he waits to welcome Chinese president Xi Jinping in Kathmandu, Nepal, Saturday. Xi arrived Saturday from New Delhi, where he met with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi. He was received by Nepalese President Bidhya Devi Bhandari and Prime Minister K.P. Sharma Oli at the Kathmandu airport.
 ?? BEN HASTY — MEDIANEWS GROUP ?? The outside seating area at the Barrel and Ale in Colebrookd­ale.
BEN HASTY — MEDIANEWS GROUP The outside seating area at the Barrel and Ale in Colebrookd­ale.

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