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Nepal Enthralled by Visit of India Premier, Who Hits ‘the Right Notes’

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Nepal Enthralled by Visit of India Premier, Who Hits ‘the Right Notes’

By GARDINER HARRIS AUG. 3, 2014


KATMANDU, Nepal — In a visit that has transfixed this impoverished country, the Indian prime minister, Narendra Modi, told Nepal’s legislature on Sunday that its effort to write the nation’s Constitution was a sacred process.

“You are writing a treatise just like the rishis in the past wrote the Vedas and Upanishads,” Mr. Modi said, referring to Hindu sages and the religious scriptures they wrote.

The 50-minute speech, the first by a foreign leader before Nepal’s legislature, the Constituent Assembly, was clearly intended to urge Nepal’s leaders to finish the country’s Constitution, delayed for years.

Perhaps just as important, Mr. Modi avoided suggesting how Nepal’s legislators should resolve their remaining controversies over how to delineate states, whether to empower a president or prime minister, and whether Hinduism should be declared the state religion. Nepal, like India, is majority Hindu.


“My work is neither to give directive nor to interfere with your work in Nepal,” Mr. Modi said, “because Nepal itself is a sovereign nation.”

Indian and Nepali analysts praised Mr. Modi.

“He hit all the right notes,” said Manjeet Kripalani, executive director of the Indian Council on Global Relations.

A deeply fractious country, Nepal has been unusually united in its embrace of Mr. Modi, the first Indian prime minister in 17 years to make a state visit here. Nepali and Indian flags fluttered throughout a warren of muddy streets in the capital, Katmandu, and large banners were hung across major intersections welcoming him. “Long Live Nepal-India Friendship,” they declared.

When Mr. Modi stepped off his airplane, a 19-gun salute boomed over the city. He was greeted by an obviously ailing Prime Minister Sushil Koirala, who recently returned from treatment in the United States for lung cancer.

Mr. Modi’s visit has inspired unusual consensus here that Nepal set aside decades of mistrust and accept Indian offers to help develop Nepal’s hydropower and tourism potentials. Such optimism has flowered before here only to be crushed by Indian indifference or Nepali mistrust, but there is real hope that this time will be different. Mr. Modi’s campaign messages of economic development and good governance resonated strongly in Nepal, which has been deprived of both for decades.

“This is a once-in-a-generation opportunity to begin fresh and build a level of trust that needs to be developed to define relations for the next 50 years,” said Sridhar K. Khatri, former executive director of the South Asia Center for Policy Studies in Katmandu.

A last-minute dispute over the wording of a major hydropower development agreement meant that the two sides signed only minor agreements on Sunday. But there is considerable hope that the power deal will materialize.

“His visit has brought great hope,” Ayush Shrestha, a 29-year-old marketing executive, said at a Katmandu restaurant. “It has led even our own political parties to sit down, put aside their differences and discuss the agenda with Modi.”

Mr. Modi was elected in May with the biggest majority in Parliament and the highest hopes for transforming India showered on any leader in 30 years. Domestically, his tentative legislative steps since then have disappointed some supporters, but his outreach to India’s long-ignored neighbors has received almost universal praise. South Asia is one of the world’s poorest and least integrated regions in the world, and India’s longtime preoccupation with domestic matters is partly to blame.

In recent years, China has stepped into the vacuum left by India, leading New Delhi to assume responsibilities in its own neighborhood. In a first for an Indian prime minister, Mr. Modi invited to his inauguration the other members of the South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation, a group of eight countries, including Pakistan, its longtime foe. Mr. Modi first visited Bhutan and is soon headed to Sri Lanka.

“The warm embrace Modi has received in Nepal raises the question of whether China is really the threat to India’s influence that some feared,” Ms. Kripalani said.

It is unclear whether Mr. Modi’s visit will inspire political compromise in Nepal, where legislative acrimony is a constant. A 10-year insurgency ended in 2006, but a resulting Constituent Assembly failed after four years of effort to write a Constitution . Paralysis ensued until elections in November led to the rout of the dominant Maoist parties.

Ruled for centuries by monarchs, Nepal has 125 ethnic groups, 127 spoken languages, scores of castes and three distinct ecosystems that have long divided its 27 million people into feuding communities, making political consensus difficult and hurting the country’s economy.

But nearly everyone seems exhausted by a continuing power crisis that leaves Katmandu mostly dark at night. A 1996 deal in which India was to build a massive dam in Nepal led to considerable political opposition at the time, but most of those who opposed that deal now advocate more such arrangements.

“Even the Maoists now acknowledge that we need to cooperate with India because we don’t have the money on our own to develop our hydropower,” said Prashant Jha, author of a book on contemporary Nepali politics.

Before his speech, some analysts worried that Mr. Modi would urge Nepal to adopt a constitutional provision declaring the country a Hindu state, as royalist factions have advocated. An avowed Hindu nationalist, Mr. Modi is scheduled to visit the Pashupatinath temple, one of Hinduism’s holiest places, on Monday, an arrangement made in part to coincide with a religiously auspicious day.

“To avoid any misperception, Modi must clearly support the current draft Constitution’s identification of Nepal as a ‘federal, secular democratic republic,’ ” C. Raja Mohan, an Indian foreign affairs analyst, wrote in an opinion piece on Sunday.

In his speech, Mr. Modi described Nepal as a “federal democratic republic,” dropping the “secular,” long a fraught word in Indian politics as well. But he did not call for explicit Hindu identification and said Nepal was “the birthplace of Lord Buddha.”

All in all, Mr. Modi got high marks. “Modi is giving us a good moment,” Bhekh B. Thapa, a former Nepali minister of foreign affairs and finance, said in an interview. “Whether it will yield results, time will tell.”

http://www.nytimes.com/2014/08/04/w...endra-modi-who-hits-the-right-notes.html?_r=0
 
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Modi mantra warms Nepali hearts | Top Stories

Modi mantra warms Nepali hearts

KATHMANDU, AUG 04 - In a first address by a foreign head of state/government to Nepal’s Parliament after 1990, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi won millions of Nepali hearts on Sunday afternoon with his 45-minute speech that he began in Nepali and continued in Hindi later.

The speech which could be described as level-headed and delivered with compassion seemed very mindful of the Nepali sensitivities, which was visible not only at the cultural front but also at the political level. He responded to the big question whether India would remain neutral on political changes in Nepal with commitment to the new federal democratic republican order.

“India respects the federal democratic republic as envisioned by Nepal,” he told a packed House of lawmakers and onlookers. Praising the Nepali effort, Modi said the constitution writing process of Nepal could set an example for the rest of the world of a peaceful resolution of a violent conflict. “I congratulate you on choosing ballot over bullet,” said Modi, in an apparent reference to the Maoists who abandoned their violent politics to join the political mainstream in 2006. Modi, who is the first head of state/government to address Nepal’s parliament post-1990, urged lawmakers to use their Rishi-man (sage mind) to ensure that the statute being drafted envisions a Nepal of the next 100 years in addition to its being an inclusive document able to connect all parts of the society.

Dressed in yellow kurta and white pyjama topped by a blue waist-coat, the Indian prime minister began his parliamentary address at 4:40 pm.

Modi also tried to address the trust deficit between the two countries on hydropower cooperation when he categorically stated that the stalled Pancheswor Multipurpose Project would move forward within a year. He stressed development, and possibilities on the economic frontier, suggesting that Nepal could make it in the league of developed countries by utilising its hydropower potential.

Modi vision for Nepal

In a substantive India policy for Nepal, Modi suggested a “HIT” formula for Nepal, saying India wants to help Nepal build highways, information highways and transways-transmission lines.

Modi explained further that development in Nepal would also be beneficial for bordering areas in India. He highlighted the importance of tourism, particularly from the religious point of view, that thousands of Hindu and Buddhist pilgrims could visit Nepal. “There are 125 crore people in your neighbourhood who would visit here at some point,” he said.

Nepali lawmakers gave a thunderous applause when he mentioned that Buddha was born in Nepal--an issue that rouses deep passion in the country when various quarters of India claim that the former was born in India. He uttered the word Buddha five times.

He acknowledged the contribution of Gorkha soldiers in the evolution of the Indian state. “There is no war that India has won without Gorkhas’ sacrifice.”

Nepali stakeholders have reacted with enthusiasm to the address.
 
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so Mr.Modis travle plans start with
1) Bhutan
2) Nepal
3) SL

looks like a decreasing order of countries that still like / look towards india a way to placate lost relationships?

Also, it looks like this PM is a god send for Indian posters in PDF - he visited the aircraft carrier then the neighbor countries.
 
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so Mr.Modis travle plans start with
1) Bhutan
2) Nepal
3) SL

looks like a decreasing order of countries that still like / look towards india a way to placate lost relationships?

Also, it looks like this PM is a god send for Indian posters in PDF - he visited the aircraft carrier then the neighbor countries.

Feeling rejected and dejected?
 
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Good decision from the Modi govt to repair ties with our neighbors. A lot of these countries weren't particularly happy with the previous govt.
 
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neither - was making an observation.
modi's first tenure (coz its highly likely he will get another tenure) will be focussed on domestic issues, and in the vicinity (SAARC). There is little chance of having better relation with US or europe, there might be some movement on our engagement with china.
 
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modi's first tenure (coz its highly likely he will get another tenure) will be focussed on domestic issues, and in the vicinity (SAARC). There is little chance of having better relation with US or europe, there might be some movement on our engagement with china.
and that is how it should be. first strengthen yourself, then your immediate vicinity.. I once heard the Adviser to the Indian PM Mr.Shiv Shankar Menon describe to a question on "how do you see India's role as a regional and global player".. and his reply was very calm "we see it as a set of concentric circles.. first centering around the sub continent and gradually increasing in reach.."

for atleast the next 2 decades (the time line can change deeding on how bullish or bearish you are on the optimism) - if India concentrates solely in its area without stretching its resources too thin.. it would probably gain the traction that China has right now.
 
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modi's first tenure (coz its highly likely he will get another tenure) will be focussed on domestic issues, and in the vicinity (SAARC). There is little chance of having better relation with US or europe, there might be some movement on our engagement with china.

Quite poor assessment and you could see improve relations with USA. Lets wait it out though but from the vibes i am getting Indo-US cooperation will flourish.

so Mr.Modis travle plans start with
1) Bhutan
2) Nepal
3) SL

looks like a decreasing order of countries that still like / look towards india a way to placate lost relationships?

Also, it looks like this PM is a god send for Indian posters in PDF - he visited the aircraft carrier then the neighbor countries.

They are not lost relationship but put aside as previous government took them as granted.

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Even staunch india critic like Pranchanda praised modi's visit as "historic". Time to undo the damage to India-Nepal relations done by Rajiv Gandhi and get Nepal in india's fold
 
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“To avoid any misperception, Modi must clearly support the current draft Constitution’s identification of Nepal as a ‘federal, secular democratic republic,’ ” C. Raja Mohan, an Indian foreign affairs analyst, wrote in an opinion piece on Sunday.

In his speech, Mr. Modi described Nepal as a “federal democratic republic,” dropping the “secular,” long a fraught word in Indian politics as well. But he did not call for explicit Hindu identification and said Nepal was “the birthplace of Lord Buddha.”

I like that part.
 
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so Mr.Modis travle plans start with
1) Bhutan
2) Nepal
3) SL

looks like a decreasing order of countries that still like / look towards india a way to placate lost relationships?

Also, it looks like this PM is a god send for Indian posters in PDF - he visited the aircraft carrier then the neighbor countries.

Mr. Modi's travel plan was

1. Bhutan
2. Brazil
where he met head of Russia, China, Brazil, South Africa, Argentina, Peru, Equador, Uruguay etc.

3. Nepal
4. Japan (coming up next)

So what does that tell you ?
 
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Mr. Modi's travel plan was

1. Bhutan
2. Brazil
where he met head of Russia, China, Brazil, South Africa, Argentina, Peru, Equador, Uruguay etc.

3. Nepal
4. Japan (coming up next)

So what does that tell you ?
Brazil was a BRICS summit - not a bilateral meet initiated by the PMO. i dint know Japan was before SL. it stll stands that he has his sites set on regional and immediate neighborhood.
 
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Brazil was a BRICS summit - not a bilateral meet initiated by the PMO. i dint know Japan was before SL. it stll stands that he has his sites set on regional and immediate neighborhood.

There were Bilateral meets that took place at the side lines of the BRICS summit. With Putin and with Xi Jinping.

India was invited to join SCO as full member and Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) by China.

It was the US that was reluctant to allow India join the APEC. Now with China's open invite, US is on the back-foot.

China also invited India to be a founder member of the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank.

Its safe to say Modi's priorities are set in his Neighbourhood, immediate or otherwise.
 
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