Lux de Veritas
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And they're going to be #2 soon , we Chinese know how to compete
This is a good thing and positive development for Nepal.
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And they're going to be #2 soon , we Chinese know how to compete
This is a good thing and positive development for Nepal.
And that's clearly indicated in the original article. Nothing to hide here.
"India accounted for 53 percent of Nepal's trade last year, down from 60 percent in 2006, when a Maoist insurgency ended. China's share of Nepal's commerce has risen to 31 percent from 3 percent in that time, data compiled by Bloomberg show."
But it also says,
"China this year overtook India as Nepal's biggest foreign investor, funding power plants, noodle factories and meat-processing units in one of the world's poorest countries. Trade is also booming: Nepal's commerce with China has outpaced that with India by 17 times since 2006, eroding the influence of New Delhi's leaders."
So, you are telling nothing new here.
Dont get me wrong. I am a patriotic Chinese. I am happy to see Nepal centrifuging back to China. And going by the way things develop it may.
I say may because most Nepali are "Indians" and they are Hindus. Not so easy for them to go to China. Blood is thicker than water.
But Nepal is really a let down by India.
What else India can do beside give money, it can't compete with China, we can provide money, make infrastructure projects and offer cheaper products than Indian's counterpart, Wait until our rail link is completed, we will drive Indian business out of Nepal
Intercultural ties is what Nepal need from India? sure money in not everything but it's most thing need to build a nation that why India wants China to invest into it nation. And yes wait until next decade to compete with us, at that time China-Nepal will already estabilish a solid cultural and economic foundation, your soft power will change nothing.
Nepali are "Indians" just like that you see in the picture and in reality there are also too many Chinese live in Nepal who are called Nepalese .Dont get me wrong. I am a patriotic Chinese. I am happy to see Nepal centrifuging back to China. And going by the way things develop it may.
I say may because most Nepali are "Indians" and they are Hindus. Not so easy for them to go to China. Blood is thicker than water.
But Nepal is really a let down by India.
You think to much comrade
The game in Nepal is not over yet
Yeah you keep thinking soft power will achieve nothing
Why I need to think too much about China-Nepal development when both nations are just doing great , of course it's not over yet, it's just the beginning...that's the most fun part. And of course India can still play the soft power, I didn't claim that it is not important.
Ram Baran Yadav, Prime Minister Sushil Koirala and his counterpart Mahendra Bahadur Pandey
All these people are Indian man and what is the use of meeting with them.
You are one of the most rational voice among PDF that I respect.
I agree with many of your comments.
I certainly hope China would have more influence over Nepal, my take is Nepal very "Indian". Blood is thicker than water. China will have more luck in Cambodia, Thailand, Vietnam or Myanmar where the culture is more similar and where ethnic Chinese or mix blood Chinese call the shot there.
You are one of the most rational voice among PDF that I respect.
I agree with many of your comments.
I certainly hope China would have more influence over Nepal, my take is Nepal very "Indian". Blood is thicker than water. China will have more luck in Cambodia, Thailand, Vietnam or Myanmar where the culture is more similar and where ethnic Chinese or mix blood Chinese call the shot there.
As I have said the people of Nepal are not all Indian,just the leaders are Indian men.Nothing original or rational here, if "Blood is thicker than water" is your major foreign policy doctrine.
China raises Nepal aid five-fold in regional diplomacy push
BY GOPAL SHARMA
KATHMANDU Fri Dec 26, 2014 6:52am EST
(Reuters) - China will increase official aid to Nepal by more than five times from fiscal 2015-16, officials said on Friday, to develop infrastructure in the landlocked nation where regional rival Indiahas long wielded political influence.
The jump in assistance was announced after talks between visiting Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi and his Nepali counterpart Mahendra Bahadur Pandey, part of a deepening engagement which is expected to lead to a visit by President Xi Jinping next year.
Both India and China have been courting the Himalayan nation as they worry about its slow transition from a constitutional monarchy to a republic and the end of a 10-year civil war in 2006 that has left deep divides.
China is concerned about the presence of Tibetans in Nepal, many of whom have crossed the treacherous Himalayas from their homeland. On Friday, Wang laid the foundations of a police academy to train officers of Nepal’s Armed Police Force that guards districts bordering Tibet.
Beijing will build the police academy as a gift on top of the annual aid of $128 million, up from the current $24 million, Krishna Prasad Devakota, a Nepal finance ministry official, said.
“As neighbors China and Nepal have common security needs ... we need to work together to crack down on illegal border crossings and transnational crimes,” Wang told reporters.
Traditionally, Tibetan exiles captured by Nepali police were handed to the United Nation's High Commissioner for Refugees for their onward journey to India where the Tibetans' spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama, is based.
But China says the refugees are illegal migrants and has been pressing Nepal to crush their movement. The number of Tibetans entering Nepal from China has fallen from about 2,500 six years ago to just about 200 a year.
Beijing's greater involvement in Nepal comes as India steps up its own engagement with its neighbors.
India has signed a deal to allow the import and export of electricity, a long pending demand of Nepal, and is expected to boost investment in Nepal's hydropower sector with a potential to generate up to 42,000 megawatts of electricity.
India, which shares a long and porous border with Nepal, has also announced a $1 billion soft loan, part of moves to woo back its neighbor.
Are Chinese really fool enough to train Nepal's police to seal the border to make Nepal an Indianized state finally as Indian wish?Nothing original or rational here, if "Blood is thicker than water" is your major foreign policy doctrine.
China raises Nepal aid five-fold in regional diplomacy push
BY GOPAL SHARMA
KATHMANDU Fri Dec 26, 2014 6:52am EST
(Reuters) - China will increase official aid to Nepal by more than five times from fiscal 2015-16, officials said on Friday, to develop infrastructure in the landlocked nation where regional rival Indiahas long wielded political influence.
The jump in assistance was announced after talks between visiting Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi and his Nepali counterpart Mahendra Bahadur Pandey, part of a deepening engagement which is expected to lead to a visit by President Xi Jinping next year.
Both India and China have been courting the Himalayan nation as they worry about its slow transition from a constitutional monarchy to a republic and the end of a 10-year civil war in 2006 that has left deep divides.
China is concerned about the presence of Tibetans in Nepal, many of whom have crossed the treacherous Himalayas from their homeland. On Friday, Wang laid the foundations of a police academy to train officers of Nepal’s Armed Police Force that guards districts bordering Tibet.
Beijing will build the police academy as a gift on top of the annual aid of $128 million, up from the current $24 million, Krishna Prasad Devakota, a Nepal finance ministry official, said.
“As neighbors China and Nepal have common security needs ... we need to work together to crack down on illegal border crossings and transnational crimes,” Wang told reporters.
Traditionally, Tibetan exiles captured by Nepali police were handed to the United Nation's High Commissioner for Refugees for their onward journey to India where the Tibetans' spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama, is based.
But China says the refugees are illegal migrants and has been pressing Nepal to crush their movement. The number of Tibetans entering Nepal from China has fallen from about 2,500 six years ago to just about 200 a year.
Beijing's greater involvement in Nepal comes as India steps up its own engagement with its neighbors.
India has signed a deal to allow the import and export of electricity, a long pending demand of Nepal, and is expected to boost investment in Nepal's hydropower sector with a potential to generate up to 42,000 megawatts of electricity.
India, which shares a long and porous border with Nepal, has also announced a $1 billion soft loan, part of moves to woo back its neighbor.