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Nepal Planning to Airlift Fuel Following India's Unofficial Blockage


Total rubbish. Check this link. The best piece on the current turmoil I have read.

The Prejudice of Power and the Exhilaration of Agitation | The Wire

Janakpur (Nepal): Located at a distance of about 125 kilometres south-east of Kathmandu, Janakpur is barely a 20-minute hop in a mid-sized aircraft. The empathy gap between Nepal’s centre and the periphery, however, is so large that there is almost no appreciation of the agonies of each other between these two cities.

The monsoon has receded, but the autumnal air is yet to cool the hot and humid flatlands around Janakpur. During the day, the sun gets blindingly bright. The evenings are balmy, but mosquitoes still sing and sting in unison, making excursions out into the narrow lanes of the town irksome. It’s much better in the morning when the rays of the sun are strong enough to drive away insects but not yet so fierce as to steam the dumps of rotting fruit that begin to attract hordes of flies at the teashop. Regardless of the season, conversations are always animated when more than two people meet at the Janak Chowk.

The Madhesis – natives of the Nepal plains who share familial, cultural and linguistic ties with people across the international border in India – began to protest soon after the process of promulgation of the constitution began in early August. When the Constituent Assembly (CA) adopted the text by voice vote in late-September, there was jubilation in parts of Kathmandu valley. Meanwhile, the statute was burnt with indignation in most of the Madhes plains.

The Madhesis claim that the new constitution curtails their citizenship rights, reduces the positive discrimination opportunities that were there in the interim constitution, delineates provincial borders in such a way that their homeland gets divided into at least five political units, and fudges with electoral constituencies to lower their representation in the central legislature.

These are serious charges. Instead of defending their position or explaining the constitution, the state struck with full force at protestors – issuing prohibitory orders against public assembly. Curfew was imposed wherever there was an agitation, and demonstrations were fired upon at the slightest provocation. In the resulting violence, almost four dozen people, including eight policemen, have lost their lives.

Hotbed of revolt


Janakpur Temple. Credit: Steffen Gauger/Licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0 via Wikimedia Commons

Political agitations have a long history in the Madhes and Janakpur has always been the epicentre of dissidence. It began with the formation of the state of Nepal through the conquest of Gorkhali forces from the mid-hills of the country in the late-18th century. During the Anglo-Gorkha wars of 1814-1816, the people of the region supported the East India Company in the hope of winning freedom from the stranglehold of the Gorkhalis. The victorious English forces reneged on their promise of ensuring justice for the non-Gorkhali population of the region and returned the territory back to advance their own geo-strategic interests.

Between 1816 and 1950, Janakpur rediscovered it religious roots. It is celebrated as the seat of King Janak, father of the Goddess Janaki in the Ramayana – and emerged as a centre of pilgrimage for the pacifist Vaishnava cult. The politics of petitions thrived as Hindu scholars collaborated with the ruling regime in Kathmandu. After the 1940s, it evolved as the cradle of oppositional politics.

In the general elections of 1958, the Nepali Congress – which was opposed to the ruling regime in Kathmandu – swept the polls. When the king dismissed the government despite its two-third majority in parliament and put the entire cabinet behind bars in 1960, Janakpur once again became the hotbed of revolt.

The armed rebellion of the Nepali Congress against the autocratic monarchy began here in January 1962 when Durganand Jha, aged 22, threw a homemade bomb at the car of King Mahendra. The monarch survived the attack and Jha easily escaped across the border through the narrow streets of the town. However, he later surrendered on principle, stating that his attack was political rather than an act of terror and he was prepared to face the consequences of his decision. Till that time, Brahmins in Nepal were exempted from capital punishment according to the law of the land. However, the vengeful king enacted a law with retrospective effect to confer the death penalty upon the young revolutionary.

In early 1970s, security personnel killed two school children – known jointly as Kameshwar-Kusheshwar in nearby Yadukoha village – for protesting against the excesses of the police. Their sacrifice has inspired a whole generation that continues to be active in oppositional politics.

From republicanism to federalism

When a young physician, Laxmi Narayan Jha began to preach republicanism in the 1980s, the police was alarmed enough to whisk him away to Kathmandu. His whereabouts remain unknown to this day. The security forces dealt in this way with dissenters before and after, but it was the “enforced disappearance” of the young physician that brought the abhorrent practice of the Nepalese state to international limelight.

During the People’s Movement of 1990, three rural women and two men from Yadukuha were once again shot dead for objecting to the highhandedness of the security forces. This gave rise to the commonly held belief even in Kathmandu that no political movement in the country can move forward without claiming innocent lives from the vicinity of Janakpur.

At the height of the armed insurgency in October 2003, five youngsters were picked up from a picnic spot, taken to the ravines, killed in cold blood, and then buried on riverbanks on the suspicion of being Maoists. Their remains were later discovered with the help of international investigating agencies. No action was taken against the perpetrators.

The first Madhes Uprising in 2007 flared up when Maoists shot at a student demonstrating against the constitution that had failed to incorporate federal provisions. The Second Madhes Uprising in 2008 too was announced from this region as people poured out into the streets to claim representation proportionate to their share of the population.

In the protests that have taken place over the past one-and-a-half months, at least nine people have lost their lives from the neighbourhood of Janakpur – all of them peaceful demonstrators or silent bystanders. In Jaleshwar, a teenager was shot dead while he was returning from his tuition classes. His grandfather was caught and shot while shopping for thepuja material needed for the last rites of his grandson. In the main town itself, a cowering youth was pulled out of some bushes where he was hiding to avoid teargas shells and shot.

Kathmandu is still reeling from the effect of what apologists of the regime call an “Undeclared Indian Blockade”. India insists that disruptions have been caused due to disturbances on the Nepali side of the border. The truth, perhaps, lies somewhere in between.
The deaths of innocents added fuel to the fire of agitation. In the days which followed, the protests intensified but the regime in Kathmandu refused to take note of the situation on the ground. In response to what it called “unrest” in Madhes, all that the government did was deploy more security forces. Perhaps it was in sheer desperation that agitators decided to close supply lines to Kathmandu by occupying major entry points along the border.

In a landlocked country, the disruption of supplies through roads throttles normal life. Kathmandu is still reeling from the effect of what apologists of the regime call an “Undeclared Indian Blockade”. India insists that disruptions have been caused due to disturbances on the Nepali side of the border. The truth, perhaps, lies somewhere in between.

It’s likely that Indians are not happy about the way constitution-making was rushed through a “fast-track” process throwing all norms of constitutionality to the winds. In the Madhes Uprisings of 2007 and 2008, Indian interlocutors had acted as facilitator and guarantor of settlements reached between the protesting party and the state. There is a reason Indian diplomats feel that they have been scorned: They have lost face with Madhesi politicos that they consider to be potential allies in a federal and republican order. It is likely that the Indian machinery has simply tightened security at the border in response – reducing regular supplies to a trickle.

The way forward


A protest in the Madhes. Credit: Sarabi Ho/nepalforall.wordpress.com

The political demands of the Madhesis are legitimate in their own right. Equality in citizenship, federalism based on homeland, positive discrimination as a measure of reparation for past injustices, and proportionate representation in the legislature are some of the fundamental features of any modern democracy. But what had added pain to the Madhesi misery is the disdain with which the Permanent Establishment of Nepal – or PEON – has dismissed their claims. It has given rise to sense of desperation in Janakpur where even the chair of the local Chamber of Commerce and Industry, Shiva Shankar Shah Hira, representing the business community that suffers most when everything is closed down in town, thunders with conviction: “It’s now or never agitation for the rights of Madhesis and we are ready to make any sacrifice.”

On the eve of International Day of Non-violence – October 2 – almost a million protestors lined up holding hands to form what has been claimed is the longest human chain in the world. In Kathmandu, there is still nothing more than derision in the outbursts of mainstream politicos that have used the nationalistic bogey – “Unofficial Indian Blockade” – to ride roughshod over the aspirations of Madhesis. As queues for petrol in the capital get longer, the rage of the people rises correspondingly. The Madhesi Street, however, has little sympathy for the suffering of fellow citizens that have failed to show compassion in their misery. The communal divide was wide before, now it has begun to deepen.

In villages and towns across Madhes, civic organisations have sprung up to support the movement with free food for those most affected by the prolonged shutdown. There is a steely determination in the air, which is preventing politicians from making compromises that can even remotely be interpreted as capitulation. This stand-off makes the role of India even more crucial. Ironically, a constitution that the PEON thought it had made by ignoring the concerns of India has ended up making the Indian position in Nepal’s politics much stronger.

Fortunately, positions have not yet become intractable. Simple amendments in the constitution can pave the way for meaningful dialogue and peaceful resolution of the conflict. Fresh elections after that can be an honourable way out of the political stasis. The onus of taking the initiative lies upon the ruling regime. Meanwhile, Madhesi protestors need to keep calm. India will probably keep a close watch on the unfolding events in Nepal and calibrate its response accordingly. New Delhi need not worry too much about anti-India sloganeering on social media; what really counts is stability in Nepal – which can’t be ensured without amendments in the constitution to make its provisions equal, just and acceptable to all sections of the country’s population.

C.K. Lal is a journalist and political commentator from Nepal
 
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Nepal Planning to Airlift Fuel Following India's Unofficial Blockage
October 07, 2015

FOREIGN201510072341000153266745795.jpg


File photo: People in Nepal crowded public transportation due to recent fuel crisis.

Nepal is planning to airlift fuel from other countries following a halt in supply of petroleum products by southern neighbor India some two weeks ago.

The state-owned Nepal Oil Corporation (NOC) is doing necessary work to ensure smooth fuel supply through airlifting after the Nepal government directed the firm to seek alternatives.

Nepal has been hit hard by the shortage of petroleum products and essential goods after India halted all the supplies through the unofficial blockade a fortnight ago. However, India has been denying such blockade.

The NOC held an emergency meeting Wednesday to plan airlifting fuel from Bangladesh in the short term and from China in the long run. However, no formal decision has been made yet.

The Himalayan nation relies heavily on India for its fuel.
We will be happy to sends fuel to Nepal. Nepal need to diversify it's supply.
 
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Well whatever the case I hope those trucks will be able to do their supply drops , the Nepalis just had a devastating quake a couple of months back. The last thing they need is having to worry about oil shipments.

I'm arguing on a humanitarian level here, sans geopolitiks.

Unfortunately it's Nepal's internal matter.

Did India cause this 'blockade' ? No.

Is India using its clout to lift it? No

Is Nepal playing the China card? Yes

Will this succeed? No

Do Nepal's elite suspect Madhesis to be in league with India? Yes

Do Nepal's Pahari(Hill) elite subject the Madhesis to racial taunts? Yes

Do Nepal's Pahari(Hill) elite keep the Madhesis out of power structures? Yes

Are the Madhesis shortchanged by the new constitution? Yes

Are Nepal's politicians willing to engage with the agitating Madhesis? No

Only way out is a positive movement on the last question.
 
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Thank You very much @Chinese-Dragon !

The problem is that the terrain on the Nepal-China border is very difficult.

We have built plenty of infrastructure in the Himalayas (and are building a lot more), but it will always be more "efficient" for Nepal to get their vital supplies from India, due to the geography.

So the current dispute between Nepal and India must be solved. We can transport supplies across the Himalayas if they need it, but it will always be a less efficient path.

Nepal unfortunately is a landlocked country and so their options are greatly limited by geography.
 
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Unfortunately it's Nepal's internal matter.

Did India cause this 'blockade' ? No.

Is India using its clout to lift it? No

Is Nepal playing the China card? Yes

Will this succeed? No

Do Nepal's elite suspect Madhesis to be in league with India? Yes

Do Nepal's Pahari(Hill) elite subject the Madhesis to racial taunts? Yes

Do Nepal's Pahari(Hill) elite keep the Madhesis out of power structures? Yes

Are the Madhesis shortchanged by the new constitution? Yes

Are Nepal's politicians willing to engage with the agitating Madhesis? No

Only way out is a positive movement on the last question.

While the Nepal's elite suspect Madhesis to be in the league with India, you have not answer the fundamental question, whether that suspicion holds truth or not. Or maybe you don't have an answer to that question.
 
.
Unfortunately it's Nepal's internal matter.

Did India cause this 'blockade' ? No.

Is India using its clout to lift it? No

Is Nepal playing the China card? Yes

Will this succeed? No

Do Nepal's elite suspect Madhesis to be in league with India? Yes

Do Nepal's Pahari(Hill) elite subject the Madhesis to racial taunts? Yes

Do Nepal's Pahari(Hill) elite keep the Madhesis out of power structures? Yes

Are the Madhesis shortchanged by the new constitution? Yes

Are Nepal's politicians willing to engage with the agitating Madhesis? No

Only way out is a positive movement on the last question.

Please excuse me on my significant ignorance on Nepali internal affairs and demographic situation(s), I did not know of ethnic animosity between the Madhesis and the Paharis, in fact I never heard of these two terms till now, i regretfully admit. I'll have to read more into this. Wow, talk about learning something new !!

The problem is that the terrain on the Nepal-China border is very difficult.

We have built plenty of infrastructure in the Himalayas (and are building a lot more), but it will always be more "efficient" for Nepal to get their vital supplies from India, due to the geography.

So the current dispute between Nepal and India must be solved. We can transport supplies across the Himalayas if they need it, but it will always be a less efficient path.

Nepal unfortunately is a landlocked country and so their options are greatly limited by geography.


Hi bro, yes, that's what i always suspected would be an issue for Nepal -- being geographically constrained being at the foot of the Himalayas. I suppose it is important for any country to diversify their resources , and I'm saying this objectively and on a neutral observer status. But due to the location of Nepal, building a pipeline connecting Nepal to say China, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Burma just isn't practical at the moment. So I would say the best solution would be to diversify the gas and oil shipment routes from India , to increase airlifting capabilities with neighbors, and lastly, to build confidence building measures to appease the ethnic sensibilities within Nepal and on the borderlands with India. Nepal's geographic proximity to India means that both countries will be inextricably linked to each other ; culturally, politicall, economically and now resource-wise, so the best thing is for both countries to maintain a neutral and balanced approach to handling internal affairs issues. I think that is the best course for everyone here.

And thanks bro for the added in depth information. Thank You.
 
.
The problem is that the terrain on the Nepal-China border is very difficult.

We have built plenty of infrastructure in the Himalayas (and are building a lot more), but it will always be more "efficient" for Nepal to get their vital supplies from India, due to the geography.

So the current dispute between Nepal and India must be solved. We can transport supplies across the Himalayas if they need it, but it will always be a less efficient path.

Nepal unfortunately is a landlocked country and so their options are greatly limited by geography.

Such deficiency will be greatly reduced once the rail link to Nepal is completed, but that's years off. Maybe its time to move the schedule forward. While it won't be in time to solve the current crisis in any case, it would give China and Nepal a better leverage in the not too distant future.
 
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Such deficiency will be greatly reduced once the rail link to Nepal is completed, but that's years off. Maybe its time to move the schedule forward. While it won't be in time to solve the current crisis in any case, it would give China and Nepal a better leverage in the not too distant future.

I think that is the most practical long term solvency to Nepal's situation. Besides, this would greatly increase Nepal's tapping of the great chinese domestic market, and at the same time, enable China to tap into the Nepali market.
 
. .
Total rubbish. Check this link. The best piece on the current turmoil I have read.

The Prejudice of Power and the Exhilaration of Agitation | The Wire

Janakpur (Nepal): Located at a distance of about 125 kilometres south-east of Kathmandu, Janakpur is barely a 20-minute hop in a mid-sized aircraft. The empathy gap between Nepal’s centre and the periphery, however, is so large that there is almost no appreciation of the agonies of each other between these two cities.

The monsoon has receded, but the autumnal air is yet to cool the hot and humid flatlands around Janakpur. During the day, the sun gets blindingly bright. The evenings are balmy, but mosquitoes still sing and sting in unison, making excursions out into the narrow lanes of the town irksome. It’s much better in the morning when the rays of the sun are strong enough to drive away insects but not yet so fierce as to steam the dumps of rotting fruit that begin to attract hordes of flies at the teashop. Regardless of the season, conversations are always animated when more than two people meet at the Janak Chowk.

The Madhesis – natives of the Nepal plains who share familial, cultural and linguistic ties with people across the international border in India – began to protest soon after the process of promulgation of the constitution began in early August. When the Constituent Assembly (CA) adopted the text by voice vote in late-September, there was jubilation in parts of Kathmandu valley. Meanwhile, the statute was burnt with indignation in most of the Madhes plains.

The Madhesis claim that the new constitution curtails their citizenship rights, reduces the positive discrimination opportunities that were there in the interim constitution, delineates provincial borders in such a way that their homeland gets divided into at least five political units, and fudges with electoral constituencies to lower their representation in the central legislature.

These are serious charges. Instead of defending their position or explaining the constitution, the state struck with full force at protestors – issuing prohibitory orders against public assembly. Curfew was imposed wherever there was an agitation, and demonstrations were fired upon at the slightest provocation. In the resulting violence, almost four dozen people, including eight policemen, have lost their lives.

Hotbed of revolt


Janakpur Temple. Credit: Steffen Gauger/Licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0 via Wikimedia Commons

Political agitations have a long history in the Madhes and Janakpur has always been the epicentre of dissidence. It began with the formation of the state of Nepal through the conquest of Gorkhali forces from the mid-hills of the country in the late-18th century. During the Anglo-Gorkha wars of 1814-1816, the people of the region supported the East India Company in the hope of winning freedom from the stranglehold of the Gorkhalis. The victorious English forces reneged on their promise of ensuring justice for the non-Gorkhali population of the region and returned the territory back to advance their own geo-strategic interests.

Between 1816 and 1950, Janakpur rediscovered it religious roots. It is celebrated as the seat of King Janak, father of the Goddess Janaki in the Ramayana – and emerged as a centre of pilgrimage for the pacifist Vaishnava cult. The politics of petitions thrived as Hindu scholars collaborated with the ruling regime in Kathmandu. After the 1940s, it evolved as the cradle of oppositional politics.

In the general elections of 1958, the Nepali Congress – which was opposed to the ruling regime in Kathmandu – swept the polls. When the king dismissed the government despite its two-third majority in parliament and put the entire cabinet behind bars in 1960, Janakpur once again became the hotbed of revolt.

The armed rebellion of the Nepali Congress against the autocratic monarchy began here in January 1962 when Durganand Jha, aged 22, threw a homemade bomb at the car of King Mahendra. The monarch survived the attack and Jha easily escaped across the border through the narrow streets of the town. However, he later surrendered on principle, stating that his attack was political rather than an act of terror and he was prepared to face the consequences of his decision. Till that time, Brahmins in Nepal were exempted from capital punishment according to the law of the land. However, the vengeful king enacted a law with retrospective effect to confer the death penalty upon the young revolutionary.

In early 1970s, security personnel killed two school children – known jointly as Kameshwar-Kusheshwar in nearby Yadukoha village – for protesting against the excesses of the police. Their sacrifice has inspired a whole generation that continues to be active in oppositional politics.

From republicanism to federalism

When a young physician, Laxmi Narayan Jha began to preach republicanism in the 1980s, the police was alarmed enough to whisk him away to Kathmandu. His whereabouts remain unknown to this day. The security forces dealt in this way with dissenters before and after, but it was the “enforced disappearance” of the young physician that brought the abhorrent practice of the Nepalese state to international limelight.

During the People’s Movement of 1990, three rural women and two men from Yadukuha were once again shot dead for objecting to the highhandedness of the security forces. This gave rise to the commonly held belief even in Kathmandu that no political movement in the country can move forward without claiming innocent lives from the vicinity of Janakpur.

At the height of the armed insurgency in October 2003, five youngsters were picked up from a picnic spot, taken to the ravines, killed in cold blood, and then buried on riverbanks on the suspicion of being Maoists. Their remains were later discovered with the help of international investigating agencies. No action was taken against the perpetrators.

The first Madhes Uprising in 2007 flared up when Maoists shot at a student demonstrating against the constitution that had failed to incorporate federal provisions. The Second Madhes Uprising in 2008 too was announced from this region as people poured out into the streets to claim representation proportionate to their share of the population.

In the protests that have taken place over the past one-and-a-half months, at least nine people have lost their lives from the neighbourhood of Janakpur – all of them peaceful demonstrators or silent bystanders. In Jaleshwar, a teenager was shot dead while he was returning from his tuition classes. His grandfather was caught and shot while shopping for thepuja material needed for the last rites of his grandson. In the main town itself, a cowering youth was pulled out of some bushes where he was hiding to avoid teargas shells and shot.

Kathmandu is still reeling from the effect of what apologists of the regime call an “Undeclared Indian Blockade”. India insists that disruptions have been caused due to disturbances on the Nepali side of the border. The truth, perhaps, lies somewhere in between.
The deaths of innocents added fuel to the fire of agitation. In the days which followed, the protests intensified but the regime in Kathmandu refused to take note of the situation on the ground. In response to what it called “unrest” in Madhes, all that the government did was deploy more security forces. Perhaps it was in sheer desperation that agitators decided to close supply lines to Kathmandu by occupying major entry points along the border.

In a landlocked country, the disruption of supplies through roads throttles normal life. Kathmandu is still reeling from the effect of what apologists of the regime call an “Undeclared Indian Blockade”. India insists that disruptions have been caused due to disturbances on the Nepali side of the border. The truth, perhaps, lies somewhere in between.

It’s likely that Indians are not happy about the way constitution-making was rushed through a “fast-track” process throwing all norms of constitutionality to the winds. In the Madhes Uprisings of 2007 and 2008, Indian interlocutors had acted as facilitator and guarantor of settlements reached between the protesting party and the state. There is a reason Indian diplomats feel that they have been scorned: They have lost face with Madhesi politicos that they consider to be potential allies in a federal and republican order. It is likely that the Indian machinery has simply tightened security at the border in response – reducing regular supplies to a trickle.

The way forward


A protest in the Madhes. Credit: Sarabi Ho/nepalforall.wordpress.com

The political demands of the Madhesis are legitimate in their own right. Equality in citizenship, federalism based on homeland, positive discrimination as a measure of reparation for past injustices, and proportionate representation in the legislature are some of the fundamental features of any modern democracy. But what had added pain to the Madhesi misery is the disdain with which the Permanent Establishment of Nepal – or PEON – has dismissed their claims. It has given rise to sense of desperation in Janakpur where even the chair of the local Chamber of Commerce and Industry, Shiva Shankar Shah Hira, representing the business community that suffers most when everything is closed down in town, thunders with conviction: “It’s now or never agitation for the rights of Madhesis and we are ready to make any sacrifice.”

On the eve of International Day of Non-violence – October 2 – almost a million protestors lined up holding hands to form what has been claimed is the longest human chain in the world. In Kathmandu, there is still nothing more than derision in the outbursts of mainstream politicos that have used the nationalistic bogey – “Unofficial Indian Blockade” – to ride roughshod over the aspirations of Madhesis. As queues for petrol in the capital get longer, the rage of the people rises correspondingly. The Madhesi Street, however, has little sympathy for the suffering of fellow citizens that have failed to show compassion in their misery. The communal divide was wide before, now it has begun to deepen.

In villages and towns across Madhes, civic organisations have sprung up to support the movement with free food for those most affected by the prolonged shutdown. There is a steely determination in the air, which is preventing politicians from making compromises that can even remotely be interpreted as capitulation. This stand-off makes the role of India even more crucial. Ironically, a constitution that the PEON thought it had made by ignoring the concerns of India has ended up making the Indian position in Nepal’s politics much stronger.

Fortunately, positions have not yet become intractable. Simple amendments in the constitution can pave the way for meaningful dialogue and peaceful resolution of the conflict. Fresh elections after that can be an honourable way out of the political stasis. The onus of taking the initiative lies upon the ruling regime. Meanwhile, Madhesi protestors need to keep calm. India will probably keep a close watch on the unfolding events in Nepal and calibrate its response accordingly. New Delhi need not worry too much about anti-India sloganeering on social media; what really counts is stability in Nepal – which can’t be ensured without amendments in the constitution to make its provisions equal, just and acceptable to all sections of the country’s population.

C.K. Lal is a journalist and political commentator from Nepal


If that be so, then India should not object to IOB, Tripura and Assam joining BD.

In spite of the current GOB being under the skirt of Mom India, BD will go all out to assist Nepal in this difficult time.
 
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If that be so, then India should not object to IOB, Tripura and Assam joining BD.

In spite of the current GOB being under the skirt of Mom India, BD will go all out to assist Nepal in this difficult time.

I am from Assam. Now say that again.

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While the Nepal's elite suspect Madhesis to be in the league with India, you have not answer the fundamental question, whether that suspicion holds truth or not. Or maybe you don't have an answer to that question.

Yes in a way. There are a few reasons for it.

1) Huge socio-edu-racial-caste-cultural relations between Madhesis & people in Uttar Pradesh & Bihar states of India across an open border.

2) So chicken & egg thing. Question is should this relation be seen as suspicious?

3) Alienation cuts both ways. Hence repeating what I said before.

Are Nepal's politicians willing to engage with the agitating Madhesis? No

Only way out is a positive movement on the last question.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


Please excuse me on my significant ignorance on Nepali internal affairs and demographic situation(s), I did not know of ethnic animosity between the Madhesis and the Paharis, in fact I never heard of these two terms till now, i regretfully admit. I'll have to read more into this. Wow, talk about learning something new !!


It's a simple case of jockeying for political dominance by two almost numerically equal communities. The main grouse is that Madhesis never got their due political prominence before.

The new constitution further restricts them. They have 50% population but only 65/165 seats in the new dispensation.
Plus the new provinces formed have been arranged in a way to render them minority in each. So they are demanding change in province boundaries to maintain their dominance in Madhesh region.

This is the heart of the problem.
 
. . . .
It's good to know but no offence! I remember only one Indian poster that claims to be native from NE.
 
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