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Featured Meetings in India to topple my govt., says Nepal PM K.P. Oli

This would be grave mistake, like the one they did in Kashmir with scrapping article 370. Now paying the price and losing Ladakh.
The law of diminishing returns states that as one input variable is increased, there is a point at which the marginal increase in output begins to decrease, holding all other inputs constant. At the point where the law sets in, the effectiveness of each additional unit of input decreases.
 
Mn0zsiOU


Prime Minister KP Sharma Oli has said plots were being hatched in New Delhi and Kathmandu to unseat him.

“Plots are being hatched to topple me for releasing the country’s new map and getting it adopted through Parliament,” said Oli on Sunday while addressing a function organised by the Madan Bhandari Foundation at Baluwatar to commemorate the leader’s 69th birth anniversary. “Given the ongoing intellectual discussions, media reports from New Delhi, embassy’s activities and meetings at different hotels in Kathmandu, it is not very difficult to understand how people are openly active to oust me. But they won’t succeed.”

Oli has been facing criticism from within and outside the party for his failure on multiple fronts, while his government has been embroiled in controversy. He, however, managed to win over parties from across the spectrum to adopt a new political map of Nepal depicting Kalapani, Lipulekh and Limpiyadhura as Nepali territories.

Since then, Oli has made it his refrain that his nationalistic stance will prompt some forces to hatch conspiracies against him.

Oli is facing a crisis within his own Nepal Communist Party as well, with the majority of Standing Committee members criticising him at the ongoing meeting.

“If anyone thinks they can topple me, I would like to remind them that our national unity is not that weak,” said Oli.

Oli argued that there won’t be anyone left to speak for the country if he is ousted.

“I am not for continuing as prime minister for long. But if I quit today, there won’t be anyone left to speak for the country,” said Oli. “I have to continue as prime minister–not for myself but for the country’s sake and not for today but for tomorrow.”

Oli also took a jibe at his opponents within his party.

“The Nepal Communist Party and its Parliamentary Party do not get swayed by anyone,” said Oli. “It would be better if everyone understands this fact that the map was not published just like that.”


Sources: https://kathmandupost.com/national/...-hatched-in-delhi-and-kathmandu-to-unseat-him
 
A looming crisis appears close to coming to a head in the ruling Nepal Communist Party with Standing Committee members preparing to demand the resignation of Prime Minister KP Sharma Oli over his government’s poor handling of the Covid-19 pandemic.

Sensing which way the wind is blowing, Oli skipped Friday’s Standing Committee meeting, although the meeting only discussed the border dispute with India. Standing Committee members still faulted the Oli administration for failing to lay the groundwork for diplomatic talks with India over the border dispute and allowing Nepal-India ties to deteriorate to the lowest levels in recent history.

Oli has avoided major discussions during the previous Standing Committee meeting held in December and many Central Committee meetings whenever he feels that he is going to be criticised by his own party members. The ongoing Standing Committee meeting, which was supposed to be held on May 7, was postponed time and again by Oli.

On Friday, many leaders asked Pushpa Kamal Dahal, the other party chair, about Oli’s whereabouts but Dahal too was unaware.

General Secretary Bishnu Poudel then informed the meeting that the prime minister was busy with his work and would join the meeting later. He never showed up.

“Oli has either ignored the significance of the meeting, which is being held after such a long time, or he has other reasons,” said Gokarna Bista, a Standing Committee member who is close to Nepal. “A chairman avoiding his own party’s meeting is disgraceful. He should have listened to his party leaders.”

Among the 18 leaders who spoke on Friday, many, including Asta Laxmi Shakya, Bhim Rawal and Oli’s own man Raghubir Mahaseth, questioned the prime minister’s intent in ignoring the crucial meeting.

Leaders were irate over the continuous ‘disgrace’ to the party meetings with Shakya saying that the meeting was held at Baluwatar, the prime minister’s residence, just because of Oli and that if he refuses to attend, the meeting must be held at the party headquarters in Dhumbarahi.

Oli knows that the deck is stacked against him at the 44-member Standing Committee. At most, he commands the loyalty of hardly 15 members and that is nowhere near enough to repel a proposal calling for his resignation.

On Wednesday, the first day of the meeting, Oli and Dahal had both accused the other of failing the party and the government, with the latter hinting that Oli should resign as either prime minister or party chair.



https://tkpo.st/2VDMc23

His days are numbered from here.
@PradoTLC @bluesky
 
Pakistan and China must look into it

I think both are having a close look at all the matters concerning the region, and at the moment when Nepal has a strong backing of an almost new superpower, India can't win this via proxy war! Hopefully, there won't be traitors within Nepal.

You messed up with Prachanda and you shall pay for it.

I heard Indian Generals discussed to make Galwan Valley a buffer zone?
 
Plans being hatched in New Delhi to oust me from power: Nepal PM Oli

Nepal Prime Minister K.P. Sharma Oli said after his move to change the map of the country, plans were being hatched in New Delhi and Kathmandu to topple him.
Nayanima Basu 28 June, 2020 9:49 pm IST
Oli-747x420.jpg

File image of Nepal PM K.P. Sharma Oli | Photo: ANI
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New Delhi: Nepal Prime Minister K.P. Sharma Oli Sunday said plans were being hatched in New Delhi and Kathmandu to oust him from power, further souring ties between India and the Himalayan country.

At a function in Kathmandu on Sunday, PM Oli said, “Plots are being hatched to topple me for releasing the country’s new map and getting it adopted through Parliament.” He added that he was making these claims based on intellectual discourse and media reports from New Delhi, and the activities of the Indian embassy in Nepal.

“Given the ongoing intellectual discussions, media reports from New Delhi, Embassy’s activities and meetings at different hotels in Kathmandu, it is not very difficult to understand how people are openly active to oust me. But they won’t succeed,” he stated.

This comes just a few weeks after Oli unilaterally changed Nepal’s map to include the disputed areas of Kalapani, Lipulekh and Limpiyadhura as part of its territory, which was followed by a constitutional amendment to adopt the new map in its national emblem on 13 June.

“If anyone thinks they can topple me, I would like to remind them that our national unity is not that weak … I am not for continuing as prime minister for long. But if I quit today, there won’t be anyone left to speak for the country … I have to continue as prime minister not for myself but for the country’s sake and not for today but for tomorrow,” said Oli.

Also read: Why Kalapani is a bone of contention between India and Nepal

Souring ties between India and Nepal
Ties between India and Nepal have been steadily deteriorating with the latter accusing India of not paying heed to its request for foreign secretary-level talks over the border issue while the Modi government has maintained that it will talk when the pandemic subsides and that it will “not accept artificial enlargement” of Nepal’s territory.

Earlier this month, Oli had also accused New Delhi of encroaching on Nepali territory since 1962 by stationing its Army in the Kalapani region, and for creating an “artificial” Kali river to demarcate the border.

Oli has been facing tremendous push back from his own Nepal Communist Party (NCP) as well as opposition Nepali Congress (NC) over his actions.

The change in Nepal’s map was unanimously supported by all political parties in the country, but the clamour for the Prime Minister’s resignation by senior party leaders such as Pushpa Kamal Dahal and Madhav Nepal — both former prime ministers – was not silenced by it.

Oli has also been facing severe criticism over the way in which his government has handled the Covid-19 crisis. There have been charges of corruption against some of his ministers over the procurement of medical devices and other equipment from China.

Last month, amid the map row, Oli had accused India of spreading coronavirus, calling it the “Indian virus” and even took a jibe at the country’s national emblem, the Lion Capital and motto ‘Satyameva Jayate (truth alone prevails)’, by saying New Delhi is now following the motto “simheva jayate (lion, signifying strength, wins)”.
 
also i hope he has a beefed up secruity detail- in additional to donning a bulletproof vest 24/7.
he might also want to make sure his vehicle has not been tampered with everytime he travells.

when dirty methods dont work, India might resort to deadly methods
 
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