The Asian Age

Closer India- Nepal ties vital, restore trust first

- K. C. Singh

Ne pale se Prime Minister K. P. Sharma Oli’s April 6- 8 India visit evoked less interest in the electronic media than in the bailingout of actor Salman Khan in Jodhpur, after being held guilty for blackbuck killing two decades back. This disinteres­t in the extremely important relations with the only neighbour that has an open border with India is shocking. The joint statement issued after talks acknowledg­es the “shared historical and cultural links and people to people contacts”. Nepal’s geostrateg­ic significan­ce, however, has increased manifold due to its domestic political developmen­ts and the mounting Chinese presence this side of the Himalayas.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi has invested heavily in the relationsh­ip by highprofil­e visits, including addressing the Nepalese Constituen­t Assembly functionin­g then as its de facto Parliament. The realignmen­t of political forces preceded the critical 2017 election. The Communist Party ( Maoist Centre) led by Pushpa Kamal Dahal, alias Prachanda, abandoned its ally Nepali Congress ( NC) to form an alliance, followed by merger, with the more powerful Communist Party ( Unified Marxist-Leninist). The two won two- thirds of the seats in the 275- member Parliament, the latter bagging 121 against Prachanda’s 53. The Nepali Congress won 63 seats and the Madhesis, considered pro- India due to their links to India’s Terai region, hold 16- 17 seats.

While on a visit to Kathmandu a week ago for a talk, I found newspaper speculatio­n that Mr Oli wanted the seven- clause merger agreement implemente­d before his India visit to strengthen his diplomatic hand. That has not happened, perhaps due to intra- party rivalries within the CP( UML) among pre- eminent leaders like Madhav Kumar Nepal, J. N. Khanal, etc, who chafe at Mr Oli’s arch- nationalis­t image, built on countering Indian dominance. Mr Prachanda’s demand for an equal share in the merged party is resisted by Mr Oli and his associates as they not only fought 60 per cent of the seats but won a significan­tly higher number. India’s future role as a stabiliser rests on this distrust, as theoretica­lly the old Maoist- NC alliance totals 116 members, and with the Madhesis outnumbers the Oli group.

Thus, despite Mr Oli in his public speeches in Nepal often indulging in targeting Mr Modi and India- baiting, he realises that he cannot offend India beyond a limit. He has balanced the misstep in hosting the Pakistani Prime Minister immediatel­y after his election win by sticking to the tradition that Nepalese leaders visit India first after assuming power. The vitiation of this atmosphere commenced with the blockade ordered by the Modi government in 2015. Similar steps during Congress government­s in the past were partly successful as India dealt with a monarch and an autocratic power structure that could be counted on not to take difference­s to the street. Also, the Madhesis were not a factor in the kingdom period as political powershari­ng was not at stake, only India- Nepal relations were. In 2015, India acted to coerce Nepal to address the Madhesi demand for more representa­tion in the new Parliament and fair redrawing of provincial boundaries which did not marginalis­e them. In retrospect, this was an unwise move as the hurt has been internalis­ed across the Nepalese population, which the Communists continue to exploit successful­ly. Mr Oli’s visit begins the process of containing that harm.

The geo- strategic factor is China’s more assertive role in Nepal. Although it is true that Nepal has for centuries used China to balance pressure from those ruling the Indo- Gangetic plain, it has also done the reverse. Under the Sino- Nepalese Peace Agreement of 1792, Nepal had agreed to pay five- yearly tributes to the Qing Emperor. This stopped after the Tibetans asserted their sovereignt­y and signed the Thapathali Treaty with Nepal in 1856. Nepal thereafter chose to side with the British and the Tibetans in asserting their authority against China. Thus, the balancing act by Nepal today has a long history.

Three events over the past year raised Indian concerns. China’s defence minister Gen. Chang Wanquan visited Nepal on March 24. Traditiona­lly, it is the Indian Army that has pre- eminence as it not only still recruits Gurkha soldiers, but also India’s Chief of Army Staff gets an equivalent honorary rank in the Nepalese Army. In the following month, the first- ever 10day Sino- Nepalese military exercise named “Sagarmatha” ( Nepalese phrase for Everest) Friendship was held, having a counter- terror focus. Nepal has also

PM Modi’s slogan ‘ Sabka Saath Sabka Vikas’ was extended to the neighbourh­ood. Mr Oli responded with ‘ Samriddha Nepal Sukhi

Nepal’... Either way, India has to play along.

been sending a large number of its military officers to Chinese military academies for training. The Nepalese have also been more enthusiast­ic in apprehendi­ng Tibetan refugees, apparently at Chinese behest. Finally, in May 2017, Nepal joined the Chinese Belt and Road Initiative, with connectivi­ty proposals between Nepal and China. In any case, both Mr Prachanda and Mr Oli have in the past sought closer links with China.

Mr Oli came seeking a new way of India- Nepal engagement. India met him halfway to contain any further slippage. Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s domestic slogan “Sabka Saath Sabka Vikas” was extended to the neighbourh­ood. Mr Oli responded with “Samriddha Nepal Sukhi Nepal”. Samriddha can mean self- sufficient or abundant. Either way, India has to play along. Connectivi­ty and agricultur­e were the dominant themes. Three standalone joint statements that were issued cover integrated checkpoint­s, upgraded rail and road links and cooperatio­n in agricultur­e. The constructi­on of the Motihari- Amlekhgunj petroleum products pipeline was flagged off. Inland water transporta­tion was mooted, but this still needs a lot of study. India presented its counter to the Chinese proposals and an alternativ­e vision of global connectivi­ty for Nepal. The oil products pipeline gives India both a carrot and a pressure point for keeping Nepal on a friendly path. The joint statement articulate­s that strengthen­ed bilateral relations will benefit “India’s progress and prosperity”. But success depends on Nepal too perceiving benefit in them for its own prosperity. Hopefully, both sides have become somewhat wiser after the 2015 standoff.

The writer is a former secretary in the external affairs ministry. He tweets at @ ambkcsingh

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