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Nepal’s PM urges India to end ‘undeclared blockade’

“I strongly request the government of India and related officials ... to immediately end the undeclared blockade and resume supply of essential goods and not let further negativity grow in the centuries-old relationship between the two countries”

AFP, DPA
Kathmandu

Nepal’s newly elected prime minister KP Sharma Oli called yesterday on neighbouring India to end its “undeclared blockade” as the nation faces crippling shortage of fuel and supplies.
Scores of trucks have been stranded at a key border checkpoint between India and Nepal for over a month following protests by ethnic minorities over the Himalayan nation’s new constitution.
The movement of cargo across other Indian border checkpoints has also slowed to a crawl, prompting authorities in Kathmandu to accuse New Delhi of imposing an “unofficial blockade” to show its dissatisfaction with the new charter.
New Delhi has denied the charge and urged dialogue with the protesting Madhesis, who have close cultural, linguistic and family ties to Indians living across the border.
“I strongly request the government of India and related officials ... to immediately end the undeclared blockade and resume supply of essential goods and not let further negativity grow in the centuries-old relationship between the two countries,” Prime Minister Oli said in his first address to the nation since taking
office.
Oli said that Nepal, recently hit by a massive quake that killed nearly 9,000 people, is facing a serious humanitarian crisis because of the blockade with a shortage of fuel and medicines.  
“The economic, social and psychological damage caused by the ongoing protests and the undeclared blockade is several times more than the quake,” said Oli.
The prime minister also called on the protesting parties to solve the issue through dialogue, adding that the constitution can be amended and the federal borders can be revised.
The constitution, the first drawn up by elected representatives, was meant to cement peace and bolster Nepal’s transformation to a democratic republic after decades of political instability and a 10-year Maoist insurgency.
But it has instead resulted in deadly violence.
More than 40 people have been killed in clashes between police and protesters representing ethnic minorities who say a new federal structure laid out in the constitution will leave them under-represented in the national parliament.
The Nepal government was to sell firewood to the public from yesterday to ease the fuel crisis situation, authorities said.
The state-run Timber Corporation, part of the forest ministry, was to sell the firewood from its depots across the country at 15 rupees (15 cents) per kilo, limited to 100kg per family.
The Timber Corporation is responsible for selling low-quality timber that cannot be used for construction or furniture. The wood is collected from community and government-owned forests across the country and sold for burning, including cremations.
The government also distributes free firewood in some districts during winter for
bonfires.
According to government figures, 64% of Nepal’s households still use firewood for cooking, with more turning to the fuel source since deliveries of cooking gas and kerosene from India stopped.



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