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All eyes on Khurshid’s trip to Nepal

Published: 09 Jul 2013 - 01:38 am | Last Updated: 31 Jan 2022 - 01:02 pm


Kathmandu: As India’s External Affairs Minister Salman Khurshid begins his first visit to Nepal today, political leaders and diplomats in Kathmandu expect that the trip will help the country overcome the long political stalemate it is facing.

The visit, announced earlier as a two-day one, has been trimmed to a day. Khurshid was to arrive today morning in Kathmandu and will return to New Delhi in the evening.

The current peace process, elections to the Constituent Assembly and drafting a constitution were the results of a New Delhi-backed 12-point agreement in 2005, an instrument that subsequently released Nepal from a century-old monarchy and later declared the Himalayan nation as a secular, federal and republic country.

Since the signing of the agreement in New Delhi in 2005, India has constantly said it wants to see a political stabile, economically progressive and a prosperous Nepal.

“Nepal-India relations are unique,” Nepal’s former foreign minister Upendra Yadav told IANS.

“At a time when Nepal is struggling to come out from the protracted political transition, Khurshid’s visit would help us overcome remaining difficulties of the peace and constitution drafting processes,” Yadav said. 

Yadav was deputy prime minister and minister for foreign affairs during 2008-09 when Maoist leader Pushpa Kamal Dahal “Prachanda” was prime minister. 

During his trip to Kathmandu, Khurshid will be meeting President Ram Baran Yadav, chairman of the Interim Elections Council Khil Raj Regmi, and leaders of major political parties.

“It is a goodwill visit pledging support for the democratic aspirations of the Nepali people,” a senior diplomat at the Indian embassy in Kathmandu told IANS.

Nepal will hold elections to the Constituent Assembly on November 19.

Ram Karki, the foreign department chief of Nepal’s UCPN (Maoist) party, however, has a different perspective on Khurshid’s visit.

“We must welcome the guest, but at a time when we are in a deep political stalemate, it would be good if the close neighbours keep away from our internal affairs,” Karki said.

He was also referring to the recent visit of Chinese State Councillor Yang Jiechi, who pledged 10 million yuan as electoral assistance to Nepal.

Karki claimed that of late, Nepal’s two giant neighbours, India and China, have upped their “tentacles” in Nepal and are gradually increasing their engagements at multiple levels.

“They (India and China) both fear that Nepal should not turn into another Balkan state or Afghanistan. If instability remains long-drawn-out, it will have direct ramification on India and China.”

Khurshid will also meet his Nepali counterpart Madhav Ghimire, and discuss the entire gamut of bilateral relations, economic assistance to Nepal and Indian solidarity for Nepal’s decision to hold polls. “We do not limit this visit as a customary one, at a time when Nepal is undergoing huge political transition,” said former Nepali ambassador Shambu Ram Simkhada. IANS