Nepal map on currency note stirs up border row with India

nepal map on currency note stirs up border row with india

Nepal, which was never under colonial rule, has long claimed the disputed areas in accordance with the 1816 Sugauli treaty with the British Raj following the Anglo-Nepalese (Gurkha) War

The boundary dispute between India and Nepal has heated up once again after the Nepali government last week announced a new currency note featuring a map that shows three border areas claimed by New Delhi.

The dispute involves the territories of Kalapani, Lipulekh and Limpiyadhura, which are currently under Indian control.

The new map adds 335 square kilometres (129 sq. miles) of land to Nepal, and the country’s central bank is expected to take up to a year to print and issue the new note.

India’s Foreign Minister S Jaishankar slammed Nepal’s decision, saying it will not change the reality on the ground.

“Our position is very clear. With Nepal, we are having discussions about our boundary matters through an established platform. In the middle of that, they unilaterally took some measures on their side,” Jaishankar told media persons.

“But by doing something on their side, they are not going to change the situation between us or the reality on the ground,” he added.

What’s the dispute about?

The boundary dispute between the two countries began to escalate after New Delhi issued a political map in November 2019 that placed the contested area within India’s territory.

Relations became more strained when India inaugurated an 80-kilometer-long roadway that passes through Lipulekh, a disputed area that lies at the strategic Nepal-India-China tri-junction.

The unilaterally built motorway links India’s Uttarakhand state to Tibet’s Kailash Mansarovar via the Lipulekh Pass, a territory historically claimed by Nepal and considered one of the shortest and most practicable trade routes between India and China.

The small Himalayan nation challenged India’s inauguration of the road by publishing a new map showing the contested areas — including the areas of Kalapani, Lipulekh and Limpiyadhura — as lying inside Nepal’s borders.

Nepal, which was never under colonial rule, has long claimed these areas in accordance with the 1816 Sugauli treaty with the British Raj following the Anglo-Nepalese (Gurkha) War.

The treaty recognized the Kali River as Nepal’s western boundary with India and the land lying east of the river is Nepalese territory.

However, these areas have been under India’s administrative control since the early 1960s.

Resolving through dialogue?

Former diplomats and foreign policy experts say New Delhi should initiate dialogue with Kathmandu and resolve the issue.

“This unilateral action does not change the situation on the ground. Both sides can produce maps supporting their claims and of the territories belonging to them,” S D Muni, an academic who has also served as India’s special envoy for Southeast Asian countries, told DW.

“But in the final analysis, this will have to be decided mutually by both sides through negotiations or otherwise they must approach bodies such as the International Court of Justice,” he added.

Nepal said it’s in favor of finding a solution to the dispute through diplomatic means.

“We want to resolve the boundary issue with India. We want to fix it through diplomatic means and through table talks. We are taking an initiative for this,” Nepal’s Foreign Minister Narayan Kaji Shrestha was quoted as saying by the Kathmandu Post.

Some observers in India believe that the currency note redesign decision of Nepal’s Cabinet, led by Prime Minister Pushpa Kamal Dahal, reflects the domestic political makeup of the current government, which they allege “thrives on whipping up anti-India sentiments” for sustaining their political appeal.

“The status of the three areas being claimed as part of Nepal could have been resolved through dialogue with India, but the leftists prefer confrontation and provocation such as publishing maps on currency notes,” said Sreeram Chaulia, professor and dean at the Jindal School of International Affairs, referring to the communist-led coalition government in Kathmandu.

“Downplaying the real threat of communist and expansionist China while exaggerating territorial disputes with India is part and parcel of ideological games being played by Nepal’s Maoists,” he added.

Border row damages close India-Nepal ties

Despite the boundary dispute, both Nepal and India share a unique relationship of friendship and cooperation, characterized by open borders and deep-rooted religious, cultural and people-to-people ties.

India is also Nepal’s largest trading partner and is investing billions of dollars in infrastructure, including hydropower plants.

But the border dispute threatens to derail the ties between the two countries, said Mahendra P Lama, a professor and development economist.

“There have been very noticeable actions by the political parties, civil society groups and the government in Nepal that showed both before and after the 2020 parliamentary resolutions, that they would pursue this matter of a new map protractedly and proactively,” Lama, who has studied the dispute closely, told DW.

“India seemingly took this matter as a routine official diplomatic bilateral matter that it thought could be resolved along with other protracted issues,” he said.

“This sensitive matter required exclusive attention and much quicker interventions based on larger consultations,” he added.

Unless new political formations come up in Nepal based on larger and broader representations, the expert stressed, “India will continue to face so-called balancing games primarily triggered by political survival and regime renewals.”

Anil Wadhwa, a former Indian diplomat, said that Nepali governments are stuck with the border issue as the nation’s parliament passed a resolution stating that the disputed territories belong to them.

He urged both sides to engage in candid talks to put an end to the dispute.

“Both India and Nepal will always remain closely tied due to historical relations. It would be in the interest of both to not let this issue hold the relationship back.”

Before you leave: Every Friday, the DW Asia newsletter delivers compelling articles and videos from around the continent right to your inbox. Subscribe below.

Edited by: Srinivas Mazumdaru

Author: Murali Krishnan (in New Delhi)

OTHER NEWS

12 minutes ago

Jackie 'O' Henderson announces shock new solo television gig

12 minutes ago

American beauty queen Briana Siaca sounds alarm after falling victim to very common Zelle scam

13 minutes ago

Candice Swanepoel shows off her cleavage in a plunging silk evening dress as she joins glamorous Toni Garrn at Roberto Cavalli's celebratory dinner in Cannes

14 minutes ago

May long weekend snow continues across the West

14 minutes ago

Seahawks QB Geno Smith Motivated, Focused Heading Into 2024 Season

15 minutes ago

Pochettino must drop Madueke and unleash Chelsea's "game changer"

15 minutes ago

Palestinians displaced by war struggle amid squalid conditions, water shortage

15 minutes ago

Nelly Korda captures her sixth victory of 2024 LPGA season at Mizuho Americas Open

15 minutes ago

Ah Chee next Linc in chain as Lions rebuild

15 minutes ago

Sunday Bird Droppings: Grayson Rodriguez is back and the Orioles offense is gone again

15 minutes ago

ASX 200 to kick off with a ‘positive start’ after last week’s ‘volatile’ market

16 minutes ago

China EV makers taking longer to pay bills amid rising stress

16 minutes ago

2 popular Westfield Old Orchard stores will soon move locations; opening timelines revealed

16 minutes ago

Former Celtic Paul Pierce stomps on Jalen Brunson's jersey after Knicks elimination

18 minutes ago

Marvel Television Banner Returns & Aims To Help Viewers “Jump In Anywhere”

20 minutes ago

Shane Dixon: Aussie father-of-three's eerie post and family torments before he plunged to his death after racking up gambling debt on P&O cruise

22 minutes ago

Roma 1, Genoa 0: Lukaku Goal Secures 6th Place, Europa League Spot

22 minutes ago

Immediate Reaction: Villarreal 4-4 Real Madrid

22 minutes ago

UK warned to brace itself for surge of Asian hornets

22 minutes ago

Nelly Korda wins Mizuho Americas Open by a stroke over Hannah Green for her 6th victory in 7 events

22 minutes ago

Ramos homers, Hicks earns 4th win as Giants beat Rockies 4-1 for first series sweep this year

22 minutes ago

Starting lineup for the 2024 Indianapolis 500, including Kyle Larson

22 minutes ago

Simpson Shoes closes its doors in Lambton after three generations and more than 90 years

22 minutes ago

UTAS prepares for fewer students, cuts spending and pauses new hires, after government caps international student numbers

22 minutes ago

Rangers’ Blake Wheeler available for Eastern Conference Final vs. Panthers

25 minutes ago

2 brothers, 18 and 20, charged with murder in Montreal’s St. Henri stabbing death: prosecutors

26 minutes ago

The blood scandal destroyed my family: I spent one last holiday with my doomed brother and our cousin - then watched their horrific deaths

27 minutes ago

Mercedes-Benz workers in Alabama vote against joining the UAW

27 minutes ago

Shane Lowry Equals Major Record To Surge Into PGA Championship Contention

27 minutes ago

Rangers told to sign 3,000-a-week ace who's "far better than Dessers"

27 minutes ago

Vennells ‘heading into corner where there’s no way out’ before inquiry showdown

27 minutes ago

New York City school spending has gone insane

27 minutes ago

Skye Wheatley goes on extraordinary rant about 'rude and selfish' influencers: 'I'm embarrassed to be called one'

28 minutes ago

Post-election blues – the future may look distinctly different for some of SA’s top politicians

28 minutes ago

Jerry Seinfeld heckled by anti-Israel protester during comedy show: 'Jew-haters spice up the show'

28 minutes ago

Sarah Mitton finishes 3rd in Diamond League shot put

28 minutes ago

Vatican updates rules on weeping statues and stigmata amid fake news fears

29 minutes ago

Toronto Argonauts re-sign veteran quarterback Nick Arbuckle

29 minutes ago

Temps plunge in coldest morning of year

29 minutes ago

Hurricane Season Could Affect Gas Prices

Kênh khám phá trải nghiệm của giới trẻ, thế giới du lịch