[This
time around, Nepal has been quietly defiant, looking up, as in 1989,
to China where two border points Tatopani and Rasua
have been activated. Aviation fuel is being airlifted and the Government has
tendered for petroleum products from abroad. While Nepal is blaming India for squeezing the border, New Delhi is disingenuously attributing the disruption
to Madhesi resentment over the iniquitous new Constitution.]
By
Ashok K Mehta
Given the rupture of relations between India
and Nepal , besides
enhanced challenge from China
that is likely to be incentivised with the election of KP Oli, New
Delhi should restore relations with Nepal
soon
The
timing of the blockade could not have been worse: Just two days away from the
week-long Dussehra festival, followed 10 days later by Tihar, the two biggest
festivals in Nepal . This time though, some supplies are
trickling in from some of the 22 transit points, unlike in 1989, when all the entry points
were closed due to a spat between King Birendra and Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi.
Then,
India delayed renewing the lapsed Transit Treaty, punishing
the king for clandestinely importing weapons from China . It was the ordinary Nepalese who suffered
and have not forgiven India . So harsh was the penalty that the Army
Chief, General VN Sharma, pleaded with Rajiv Gandhi about its adverse effect on
the morale of Gorkha soldiers and their families. Earlier in 1985, during the
Gorkhaland movement, the Government was acutely concerned about its impact on
the serving Gorkha soldiers.
In
2005, Maoists had laid siege to the Kathmandu
valley, locking it for more than a week. Choked for essential supplies, National
Security Advisor JN Dixit held an emergency meeting of three Service chiefs to
consider a repeat of the 1986 bread-bombing of Jaffna . Kathmandu
was contacted but it said, ‘No, thank you’.
This
time around, Nepal has been quietly defiant, looking up, as in 1989,
to China where two border points Tatopani and Rasua
have been activated. Aviation fuel is being airlifted and the Government has
tendered for petroleum products from abroad. While Nepal is blaming India for squeezing the border, New Delhi is disingenuously attributing the disruption
to Madhesi resentment over the iniquitous new Constitution.
Anti-India
sentiment is a seasonal phenomenon. Before the advent of multi-party democracy,
it was blamed on monarchy for creating sovereign space. Now it is mainly the
non-mainstreamed Maoists like the Mohan Baidya and Netra Bikram Chand groups
which carry the can. But sections of other parties and civil society have also
joined the bandwagon, angry with New Delhi ’s last minute demand to amend the
Constitution.
A
torrent of nationalism engulfed the media, lambasting India, with Maoist
supremo Pushpa Kamal Dahal ‘Prachanda’ saying,”We are friends of India but not
its yes-men”, while an advisor to then Prime Minister Sushil Koirala emphasised
Nepal’s sovereign right to make its own decisions. The anger and despair
manifest in Kathmandu and other urban areas this time is different
from the anti-India protests of the past triggered off by Madhuri Dixit, Hrithik
Roshan and Madan Lal Khurana for what they allegedly said or did not say.
This
time Nepal is demanding respect, dignity and being
treated as sovereign equals. Sadly Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s hypnotic
charm and magic, which won the hearts and minds of Nepalis last year, has
evaporated with the heat and dust of the blockade.
The
genesis of the rupture of Government-to-Government relations can be traced to
Mr Modi’s sage but unwelcome advice that the Constitution must be based on
consensus. The next trigger was the 16-point agreement after the earthquake
between the four political parties (Big four) on June 8, to set aside residual
differences over the Constitution, which came as a big surprise for India . In other words, India was not involved in forging the consensus.
On
August 8, the Big four revealed a six-State map, later increased to seven
States, which tore up the Madhesi and Tharu aspirations of autonomy. In Kathmandu on that fateful day, this writer learnt how
one of the Big Four, the effervescent Tharu leader Bijaya Kumar Gachchhadar, looking
at the map lamented: “Our head and feet have been chopped off.” By September 20,
the Constituent Assembly had passed the 302 Articles of the Constitution and
promulgated it despite India ’s belated and brazen intervention.
It
seems India lost the plot as its back-channel management
went awry due to lack of strategic political guidance, resulting from the
illusion that Mr Modi had won over Nepal for all time. New Delhi was presented a fait accompli. Agreements
not assurances work in diplomacy and foreign relations, and that too at a high
political level. Despatching the Foreign Secretary — after the horse had bolted
from the stable — who is, after all, a bureaucrat, as Prime Minister’s Special
Envoy, did not signal the urgency of the mission. Never before in the history of
India-Nepal relations has a prime ministerial envoy returned empty-handed.
By
its support to the Madhesis who constitute 24 per cent of the population and
along with Tharus make it 31 per cent, India has alienated the majority of Nepalese. The
cause is just but the methods employed not so just. The episode has sharpened
the strains between Pahadis and Madhesis and corroborated the strategic linkage
between Madhesis and India .
The
Madhesi political consciousness was inspired by India in 2007, which led to Madhesi parties
winning 84 seats in the 2008 election, making them become virtual king-makers. This
advantage was frittered away, with their strength declining to 56 seats in the 2013
election; this left the Madhesis a house divided with little love lost between
Tharus and Madhesis. Mr Gachchhadar is now a Deputy Prime Minister in the new
Government.
A
lesson from the blockade of 2015 is to seek alternatives for succour by land
and air. In 1989, Kathmandu failed to do so. In the past the Chinese
told Kathmandu it cannot be a substitute for India as a source of goods, supplies and other
essentials. With an economy nine times bigger than India’s and growing — with
rail lines and improved communications to Nepal border and the likelihood of an
oil pipeline and railway line to Kathmandu in the next five to seven years —
Beijing could be in a position to ease the squeeze in Terai if not replace
India as the primary source of goods. This would also depend on the political
stability in Tibet . Besides the enhanced challenge from China likely to be incentivised by the new Prime
Minister, KP Oli-led Left Alliance Government, ideologically ill-disposed to India and the Madhesis, the priority for New Delhi is to restore relations with the people of Nepal .
Achievements
of Operation Maitri and Mr Modi’s famous ‘hamare sambandh dilon ki dastan kahte
hain’ in Nepal Parliament must not be lost. For Mr Oli, the first task must be
to expedite the passage of the constitutional amendments which he has held back.
This will lift the blockade and bring cheer to Nepalis suffering from the 60-day
protests in the Terai. Nothing like a happy Dasain and Tihar for what is left
of 2015.