Millennium Post

Modi-deuba talks will expand cooperatio­n: Foreign Secy

PM Modi will have talks with Nepalese PM Deuba on May 16

- OUR CORRESPOND­ENT

NEW DELHI: Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s talks with his Nepalese counterpar­t Sher Bahadur Deuba at Lumbini in Nepal on May 16 will have a comprehens­ive agenda to further expand cooperatio­n in multiple areas including hydropower and connectivi­ty, Foreign Secretary Vinay Mohan Kwatra said.

Asked whether the boundary dispute between the two sides will figure in the talks, he said India has always maintained that the existing bilateral mechanisms are the best way forward to deliberate on the issues, adding they should be discussed in a “responsibl­e manner” without their “politicisa­tion”.

Modi is paying a day-long visit to Lumbini on the occasion of Buddha Purnima. It will be the prime minister’s fifth visit to Nepal since 2014.

In Lumbini, the PM will visit the sacred Mayadevi temple and deliver an address at a Buddha Jayanti event organised by the Lumbini Developmen­t Trust.

Modi and Deuba, who visited India last month, will hold extensive talks.

“The fact that a return visit is taking place in such a close succession is a reflection of the closeness of our high-level exchanges as well as of the upward trajectory in our mutually beneficial partnershi­p,” Kwatra said.

The foreign secretary said Modi and Deuba will build on their productive conversati­on in Delhi last month with a view to further expanding the shared understand­ing and cooperatio­n in multiple areas including hydropower developmen­t and connectivi­ty.

He said the visit will “reaffirm” India’s commitment toward ties with Nepal and demonstrat­e the priority that New Delhi attaches to the neighbourh­ood.

“I have a feeling that the conversati­on between the two leaders will have a comprehens­ive agenda,” Kwatra said.

The foreign secretary said the entire “scope and landscape” of the India-nepal partnershi­p is “very wide and extensive”.

“The conversati­ons between the two leaders will pick up from where they left off last month when PM Deuba visited here and would no doubt cover all elements of our bilateral engagement whether it is developmen­t partnershi­p, whether it is assessment and stock-taking of how connectivi­ty projects are doing, what more can be done to connect the two societies of south Asia and also aspects related to hydropower cooperatio­n, trade and investment,” Kwatra said.

On the boundary dispute, Kwatra said there are establishe­d bilateral mechanisms to address such issues.

“In so far as the border discussion­s between the two countries are concerned, as you all know, there are establishe­d bilateral mechanisms which exist between them,” he said.

“We have always maintained that they are the best way forward in discussing those issues, discussing in a responsibl­e manner without really politicisa­tion of those issues. That is subject which will essentiall­y be in the score of those establishe­d bilateral mechanisms,” he added.

Ties between the two countries came under severe strain after Kathmandu published a new political map in 2020 that showed three Indian territorie­s - Limpiyadhu­ra, Kalapani and Lipulekh - as part of Nepal.

On its part, India reacted sharply, calling it a “unilateral act” and cautioned Kathmandu that such “artificial enlargemen­t” of territoria­l claims will not be acceptable to it.

PM Modi is paying a day’s visit to Lumbini on the occasion of Buddha Purnima

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