Kuwait Times

Nepal protests new Indian road through disputed territory

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KATHMANDU: Nepal protested India’s inaugurati­on of a new road to China that passes through territory claimed by Kathmandu on Saturday, with police arresting dozens demonstrat­ing close to India’s embassy. Indian defense minister Rajnath Singh on Friday inaugurate­d via video link the 80kilometr­e (50 miles) long road from Ghatiabaga­rh in northern Uttarakhan­d state to the Lipu Lekh pass high in the Himalaya. The pass is claimed by Nepal based on an 1816 treaty that defines its western border with India.

Kathmandu also claims the adjoining and strategic Kalapani as a part of its territory, although Indian troops have been deployed there since New Delhi fought a war with China in 1962. Last year New Delhi published a new map that showed Kalapani within its borders, a move protested by Kathmandu. Nepal’s foreign ministry condemned India’s “unilateral act” that “runs against the understand­ing reached between the two countries... that a solution to boundary issues would be sought through negotiatio­ns.”

It called on India “to refrain from carrying out any activity inside” in the territory. Police said at least 38 people were detained as they gathered outside the Indian embassy in Kathmandu and other areas to protest the inaugurati­on of the road. A nationwide coronaviru­s lockdown has been imposed in Nepal. Nepal protested to India and China in 2015 when the two countries issued a joint statement listing the Lipu Lekh pass as a bilateral trade route. The hashtag #backoffind­ia was trending on Twitter in Nepal Saturday.

 ?? — AFP ?? KATHMANDU: Police detain demonstrat­ors during a protest against India’s newly inaugurate­d link road to the Chinese border in front of the parliament yesterday.
— AFP KATHMANDU: Police detain demonstrat­ors during a protest against India’s newly inaugurate­d link road to the Chinese border in front of the parliament yesterday.

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