[More than 40 people were killed
in western Nepal and its southern plains, home
to the Madhesi and ethnic Tharu communities, during constitution-related
protests this year. The groups have said the Constitution curtails their
rights, and they demanded that Nepal ’s political subdivisions be
redrawn to afford them more political power.]
a
KATHMANDU, Nepal — Nepal began rationing fuel on Monday to cope
with a worsening shortage brought on by continuing unrest over the country’s
new Constitution and a dispute with neighboring India.
The country imports all of its fuel from India,
but tanker trucks carrying fresh supplies have been blocked from crossing the
border since late last week. “Things are completely out of order,” said Deepak
Baral, a spokesman for the state-run Nepal Oil Corporation. “What we are doing
now is just to continue emergency-only services.”
Mr. Baral said strict limits would be imposed on the sale of
fuel to taxis, school buses, private cars, motorcycles and scooters. “Despite
all these austerity measures, we will run out of fuel within the next 10 days,”
he said.
Nepali
officials blamed India for the shortage, saying it
had ordered its border officials not to let the fuel trucks cross. But Indian
officials said the disruption had been caused by mass protests in Nepal against the Constitution.
“It
is an economic blockade of Nepal ,” said Mahesh Basnet , Nepal ’s industry minister. “India imposed it after some of its
suggestions raised internally regarding the new Constitution were not
addressed.” He added that the move was igniting “anti-India sentiment” in the
country.
Demonstrators in Kathmandu shouted anti-India slogans on
Monday to protest the fuel shortage.
The Indian Ministry of External
Affairs denied ordering any blockade, and Indian officials said sit-ins on the
Nepalese side of the border by members of the Madhesi ethnic group, who have
been protesting the Constitution for more than a month, were disrupting trade
across the border.
“There is no blockade from our side,” Vikas Swarup, the spokesman
for the ministry, wrote in an email on Monday.
More than 40 people were killed
in western Nepal and its southern plains, home
to the Madhesi and ethnic Tharu communities, during constitution-related
protests this year. The groups have said the Constitution curtails their
rights, and they demanded that Nepal ’s political subdivisions be
redrawn to afford them more political power.
Though the violence has ebbed, the protests appeared to have
taken on a new form through sit-ins at border posts.
The impasse has underscored Nepal ’s profound economic reliance
on India , particularly after April’s devastating earthquake destroyed Nepal ’s land trade routes with China .
About 1,000 trucks have been waiting on the Indian side of the
border since Thursday, according to Kamlesh Kumar, an Indian customs official
in Raxaul in Bihar State .
Hundreds of Madhesi protesters
have staged sit-ins at border crossings that have lasted for days, said A. K.
Singh, a senior official of the Sashastra Seema Bal, an Indian security force
that oversees the India-Nepal border. Mr. Singh said it was impossible for India to intervene because the
demonstrations were in Nepal .
Abhay Kumar, a spokesman for the Indian Embassy in Kathmandu , said truckers were afraid to
enter Nepal because of security concerns.
“A political solution has to be found to this issue,” Mr. Kumar said.
Nepali officials counter that
the sit-ins took place in a “no man’s land” between Indian and Nepalese border
posts and that Nepal needed the help of Indian
border forces to clear them away.
Mr. Basnet, Nepal’s industry minister, said Indian customs
officials had kept fuel trucks from crossing into Nepal even in areas
unaffected by the protests and sit-ins, like the country’s far west.
The controversy comes after more than a year of friendly
relations between Nepal and India . Prime Minister Narendra Modi
of India visited Nepal in 2014, and India pledged $1 billion for
reconstruction after the earthquake.
On Friday, Nepali officials summoned India ’s ambassador, Ranjit Rae, to
the Foreign Ministry over the fuel crisis, and Nepal ’s commerce and supplies
minister went to Delhi on Monday to meet with officials.
Prime Minister Sushil Koirala of Nepal visited Tharu and Madhesi
areas over the weekend to meet with local leaders and security officials, a
step many in Nepal had urged him to take during
the violent protests. Nepali lawmakers have said concerns over the boundaries
of provinces can be addressed through amendments to the Constitution.
In Kathmandu , far fewer cars than usual were on the roads. Drivers waited in
long lines hoping to buy fuel, and many filling stations posted signs saying
they were sold out.
“I have been waiting for fuel since yesterday morning, and
still, 150 vehicles are ahead of me,” said Shukraraj Thing, a Kathmandu taxi driver waiting on Monday
at a fuel pump.
“India always objects when Nepal tries to move ahead on its
own,” he said. “Nepal should clear its roads
connecting to China , instead of relying fully on India .”
Bhadra
Sharma reported from Kathmandu , and Nida Najar from New Delhi .