KATHMANDU - Indian Foreign Secretary Shivshankar Menon began his whirlwind assessment visit to Nepal Tuesday with a flurry of consultations, including a 90-minute meeting with Maoist Prime Minister Pushpa Kamal Dahal Prachanda.
Arriving at the Tribhuvan International Airport in the afternoon after his flight from New Delhi was delayed by bad weather, the Indian envoy told the media that he had come to learn about developments in Nepal’s ongoing peace process and the drafting of a new constitution and to reiterate India’s support.
Menon, who had accompanied Indian External Affairs Minister Pranab Mukherjee in November as the first Indian official delegation to meet the new Maoist government of Nepal, held a lengthy consultation with Prachanda soon after his arrival.
The talks reviewed the progress on decisions taken between India and Nepal during Prachanda’s first official visit to New Delhi last September after assuming office and other commitments pledged during the Indian minister’s visit.
Menon is accompanied by Satish Mehta, joint secretary at the ministry of external affairs in charge of Nepal and Bhutan.
The Indian delegation will also meet opposition leader and former prime minister Girija Prasad Koirala later during the day.
Though described as a regular visit, Menon’s arrival however was preceded by events that read as bad omens.
The Kathmandu Post daily Tuesday reported that the spurs on the Kosi river, damaged after a devastating flood last year, are not likely to be repaired by mid-March.
The report quoted Nepal’s water resources ministry spokesman Mathura Dangol as saying that the Central Water Commission of India had not yet identified the damaged spurs that need to be repaired and fortified.
It also reported the official as saying that there could be fresh disasters if the damaged spurs were not repaired by monsoon since their absence would make the embankment of the Kosi - that was breached last year displacing over 2 million people in India’s Bihar state - vulnerable.
During his visit in November, Mukherjee had said India was working closely with Nepal to ensure that work on the breach was completed by March 2009.
The Indian minister had heard tales of woe from several leading Indian business organisations in Nepal and had said they had been taken up with the Prachanda government, which had assured action.
However, there was a sense of déjà vu on the eve of Menon’s arrival with India’s leading infrastructure development company GMR Energy asking Nepal’s government for security.
Last year, GMR pipped other Indian rivals to bag the 300MW Upper Karnali hydropower project in Nepal despite objections by local organisations.
From Sunday, locals have stopped work at GMR’s site in Achham and Dailekh districts, forcing the company to write to the local authorities for security.
The disruption comes despite talks between Mukherjee and Prachanda last year about India’s cooperation for the Nepal government’s declared target of generating 10,000 MW within the decade for mutual benefit.
Last but not the least, Menon’s arrival comes after an ethnic minister in the Maoist government was heckled for speaking in Hindi at a public meet.
Rajendra Mahato, commerce and supplies minister and chief of Terai party Sadbhavana Party, was not allowed to speak in Hindi at the inauguration of the eighth general convention of the Communist party of Nepal-Unified Marxist Leninist in Butwal town Monday.
Last year, Nepal’s first vice-president Parmanand Jha had triggered violent public protests for having taken the oath of office in Hindi, which is rejected by Nepal for its wide use in India.
Related News
Obama says the UN has often been forum for discord, urges leaders to focus on common goodSeptember 23rd, 2009 Obama: UN has often been forum for discordUNITED NATIONS — President Barack Obama says the United Nations is at a pivotal point in its history. Obama says the UN has done extraordinary good around the world, but has often been a forum for discord instead of forging common ground.
Nepal PM to arrive in New Delhi TuesdayAugust 17th, 2009 NEW DELHI - Nepal's Prime Minister Madhav Kumar Nepal will arrive here Tuesday for a five-day visit - his first trip to India after becoming premier. Nepal is expected to hold talks with Prime Minister Manmohan Singh.
Pakistan foreign secretary to visit NepalJune 26th, 2009 KATHMANDU - Less than a week after India sent its Foreign Secretary Shivshankar Menon to Kathmandu to discuss border problems with Nepal's new government as well as the halted peace process, Pakistan is sending its foreign secretary here for talks. Salman Bashir is arriving Saturday on a three-day visit, Nepal's foreign ministry said.
Maoist protests disrupt Menon's Nepal visitJune 21st, 2009 KATHMANDU - Indian Foreign Secretary Shivshankar Menon's two-day visit to Nepal was disrupted Sunday by nationwide protests called by the Maoists to vent their anger at the government for revoking an earlier government's decision to sack the army chief, Gen Rookmangud Katawal. Menon, who was scheduled to meet four ministers Sunday before departing for New Delhi, managed to hold talks with only Foreign Minister Sujata Koirala as the foreign ministry, relocated to the former royal palace recently, was away from the ministerial hub which lay under Maoist siege.
India, Nepal agree to fast-track cooperation amid protestsJune 20th, 2009 KATHMANDU - Indian Foreign Secretary Shivshankar Menon Saturday began his two-day visit to Nepal with an agreement on fast-track cooperation even as police arrested nearly two dozen protesters trying to show black flags to the envoy and holding a demonstration in front of the Indian embassy in Kathmandu. Menon, the first high-level Indian official to visit Nepal after the formation of a new coalition government, kicked off talks with the new premier, Madhav Kumar Nepal, in a bid to give impetus to the halted peace process.
Black flags shown to Menon in Nepal, four arrestedJune 20th, 2009 KATHMANDU - Indian Foreign Secretary Shivshankar Menon, on a two-day visit to Nepal Saturday to give fresh impetus to the obstructed peace process and foster better ties with the new government, faced protests at the Kathmandu airport on his arrival by youths alleging India had occupied Nepal's territory. Nepal police said about seven to eight young men, seemingly students, tried to show the visiting envoy black flags as he alighted at the Tribhuvan International Airport in Kathmandu.
Ahead of Nepal PM's visit, Menon goes to Kathmandu SaturdayJune 18th, 2009 NEW DELHI - Foreign Secretary Shivshankar Menon leaves for Kathmandu Saturday amid continuing political instability in the Himalayan state for a two-day trip that is expected to set the stage for Nepal's new Prime Minister Madhav Kumar Nepal's visit to India. Menon will meet Nepal and Foreign Minister Sujata Koirala and discuss a host of issues, including the floundering peace process and progress in drafting of the new constitution.
Alarmed India to send top diplomat to NepalJune 15th, 2009 KATHMANDU - Alarmed at the inability of the new Nepal government to get its act together and the growing Maoist opposition, India is sending its Foreign Secretary Shivshankar Menon to Kathmandu Saturday to express its concern and push forward the halted peace process. Menon is arriving on a two-day whirlwind visit Saturday, a Nepali foreign ministry official told IANS Monday.
Madhav Kumar Nepal elected as Nepal's new Prime MinisterMay 23rd, 2009 KATHMANDU - Madhav Kumar Nepal, a UML (Unified Marxist Leninist) nominee, was chosen as the new Prime Minister of Nepal in the Legislature-Parliamentary session of the Constituent Assembly (CA) on Saturday. Madhav, in the absence of any challenger, was chosen unopposed.
US says it values relationship with India as Menon begins dialogueMarch 10th, 2009 WASHINGTON - The United States declared it values the relationship with India as Foreign Secretary Shivshankar Menon began the first high-level interaction with President Barack Obama's administration with meetings with his chief diplomat and other top aides. Before separate meetings with Secretary of State Hillary Clinton at the State Department and national security advisor, Gen James Jones, at the White House Monday, Menon also met Deputy Secretary James B.
Actor Balachandra Menon may contest electionsMarch 8th, 2009 THIRUVANANTHAPURAM - National Award winner and veteran Malayalam actor Balachandra Menon Saturday said he planned to contest the Lok Sabha election as an independent from Thiruvananthapuram. 'One thing is certain.
After India, China to send special envoy to NepalFebruary 22nd, 2009 KATHMANDU - A week after Indian Foreign Secretary Shivshankar Menon visited Nepal to assess the progress of the commitments pledged between India and Nepal, it is now the turn of the Himalayan republic's northern neighbour China to send a special envoy to Kathmandu. Liu Jieyi, China's assistant foreign minister, will arrive in Kathmandu Feb 25 for a three-day visit during which he will meet Prime Minister Pushpa Kamal Dahal Prachanda, Foreign Minister Upendra Yadav and leaders of the major political parties.
GMR trouble in Nepal resolved: MenonFebruary 17th, 2009 KATHMANDU - Work has resumed at the project site of Indian company GMR Energy in western Nepal after obstruction by locals since Sunday, Indian Foreign Secretary Shivshankar Menon said Wednesday at the conclusion of his two-day visit to this Himalayan country. 'Work has resumed.
India not to share Nepal issues with ChinaFebruary 17th, 2009 KATHMANDU - Before returning to New Delhi at the end of his two-day whirlwind visit to Nepal, Indian Foreign Secretary Shivshankar Menon Wednesday ruled out sharing Nepal issues with the Himalayan republic's other giant neighbour China. Reacting to the proposal mooted by opposition leader and former prime minister Girija Prasad Koirala that China and India should form a joint Nepal mechanism, the Indian envoy said the prime focus of his visit was to review New Delhi's bilateral relationship with Kathmandu and discuss how to strengthen it further.
Menon to arrive in Nepal for talks with Maoist governmentFebruary 15th, 2009 KATHMANDU - Three months after he had accompanied Indian External Affairs Minister Pranab Mukherjee to Nepal, India's Foreign Secretary Shivshankar Menon is arriving in Kathmandu Tuesday on a two-day visit. The Indian envoy is scheduled to hold talks with Nepal's Maoist Prime Minister Pushpa Kamal Dahal Prachanda, Foreign Minister Upendra Yadav and opposition leader and former premier Girija Prasad Koirala.