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
File image of Nepal PM K.P. Sharma Oli | Photo: ANI
Text Size:
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)”.