City
Epaper

Have India and Nepal quietly started rechartering their bilateral ties?

By IANS | Updated: August 31, 2021 12:20 IST

New Delhi, Aug 31: Amid rising uncertainty in Central Asia pressed by the Afghanistan crisis, India and Nepal which ...

Open in App

New Delhi, Aug 31: Amid rising uncertainty in Central Asia pressed by the Afghanistan crisis, India and Nepal which share an open border, are quietly moving towards re-chartering a new policy that will boost bilateral trade and people to people contact.

The International Business Times an American online publication noted that chief of BJP's foreign affairs department, Vijay Chauthaiwale's recent visit to Kathmandu and meetings with the top leaders might go unnoticed by the masses, but it is a crucial step in the direction of jump-starting bilateral ties between India and Nepal.

A step that is seen to be cementing India-Nepal ties, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) last week increased the limit on remittance for a single transaction from India to Nepal under the Indo-Nepal Remittance Facility Scheme from Rs 50,000 to Rs 2 lakh. The move is expected to boost trade between the two neighbours while facilitating pension payments among other things for ex-servicemen who have settled in the Himalayan country.

Insiders said that India will have to put in place a well thought out Nepal at the earliest especially as China has already been trying to increase its influence in Kathmandu. China, which is a close ally of Pakistan, has already said that it is willing to rebuild Afghanistan under the Taliban 2.0. This, several foreign affairs pundits say, could further boost Beijing's hold in the region and that India cannot afford to "let go of an opportunity".

Insiders said that Nepal Prime Minister Sher Bahadur Deuba too is looking at India for extended support at a time when the new government would face the tall task of stabilising the economy.

Even the Beijing headquartered Global Times said in an article that the key to "Nepal's access to the world lies in India's hands."

"Prime Minister (Sher Bahadur) Deuba's India strategy should be clear and concise. It should focus on cleaning up the clutter and confusion left behind by the previous administration. A very precise message should be sounded to not just India and the Indian leadership, but to his own constituency, that Nepal accords the highest priority to developing friendly and constructive relations with New Delhi," Bhaskar Koirala, Director of the Nepal Institute of International and Strategic Studies told India Narrative.

A paper by the Observer Research Foundation said that though Nepal-India relations are largely governed by people-to-people relations, the importance of government-to-government relations cannot be underestimated.

For now, India will be keenly watching Deuba's cabinet that the leader is yet to form despite completing over a month in office.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: Bhaskar koiralabjpasiaNew DelhiInternational Business TimesThe new delhi municipal councilDelhi south-west
Open in App

Related Stories

MumbaiMumbai: BJP Leader Kirit Somaiya Stages Protest in Mulund To Demand Removal of Illegal Loudspeakers From Mosques

MaharashtraMarathi vs Hindi Row: Raj Thackeray’s MNS Party Puts Out Provocative Posters and Intensifies Protest in Mumbai

MaharashtraNCP-SCP's Rohit Pawar Backs Uddhav Sena's Use of AI Balasaheb Thackeray, Says BJP Uses it for Their Leaders

NationalBihar Assembly Election 2025: Big Blow to BJP-Led NDA as RLJP Chief Pashupati Kumar Paras Exits Alliance, Vows to Contest All 243 Seat

NationalAmbedkar Jayanti 2025: Tensions Flare Within Mahayuti as Eknath Shinde and Ajit Pawar Dropped from Event Speeches

International Realted Stories

InternationalJordan Foreign Minister stresses urgency of ceasefire, humanitarian aid entry into Gaza

InternationalUN envoy holds talks in Oman as airstrikes continue in Yemen

InternationalStudent knife attack at French school leaves 1 dead, 3 injured

International"Strongly support whatever India does to pursue terrorists": UK MP Bob Blackman on Pahalgam attack

InternationalKremlin says potential NATO deployment in Ukraine 'unacceptable'