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Raising a question-mark over his visit to India next month, Nepal Prime Minister KP Sharma Oli on Tuesday said it will not be appropriate for him to visit New Delhi as long as a blockade of the Nepal-India border continues.
A now more than five-month-old anti-Constitutional protest by Madhesis in the southern Nepali Terai has led to a blockading of a major portion of the 1,868-km open border that the landlocked Himalayan nation has with its southern neighbour.
Most of the 41 transit and customs points along the southern portion of this open border have been besieged by the Madhesi protestors who are demanding, among others, a redrawing of the boundaries of the provinces in Nepal as proposed in the new Constitution – promulgated on September 20 last year; and representation in Parliament on the basis of population.
Significantly, the Nepal Terai has almost 51 percent of the country’s population and yet gets only one-third of seats in Parliament.
The Madhesis also seek proportional representation in government jobs and restoration of rights granted to them in the interim constitution of 2007 which the new charter has snatched away.
An India visit by Oli, the first foreign tour by him after assuming the office, is likely to take place in late February with preparations apace, according to reports in the Nepali media.
But the leftist premier, who has assumed an ultra-nationalist posture and shown unwillingness to meet the grievances of the Madhesi protestors, has often declared his resolve not to visit New Delhi till the agitation in the Terai was over.
In an interaction with senior editors at his residence on Tuesday, Oli expressed the hope that the blockade at key Nepal-India entry points will be lifted within a couple of days.
He also reiterated that he will not visit India until the situation in the Nepali Terai normalises.
Nepal is falling severely short of fuel, essential supplies, medicines and other stuff due to the prolonged blockading of the border customs points by Madhesi protestors.
India has been urging Kathmandu to reach out to the discontented sections in the Nepal Terai as soon as possible.
Unnerved by the prolonged Madhesi agitation, the ruling major-Left coalition as also the main opposition Nepali Congress last week approved two amendments to the four-month-old Constitution partly meeting the demands of the agitating Madhesis.
Also last week, the government launched an ambitious Rs 5 billion Border Area Development Programme (BADP) in the south-eastern Nepali Mahottari district.
The five-year development programme shall initially target the development of proposed province number 2 – the heartland of the ongoing Madhesi agitation -- and will seek to create physical and social infrastructures in the region that borders southern neighbour India.
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