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 thanks to India MAOISTS ARE IN POWER!
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Posted on 04-14-08 3:54 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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Thanks to Indian govt the damn terrorists are in power.

Thank god that USA still considers them as terrorists.

However, it is surprising that India is now accepting the MAOISTS-terrorists in power. India HAS BEEN HARPING ABOUT DEOMCRACY that is why they did not support King's control! IT IS REALLY MYSTERIOUS TO NOW SEE INDIA CONGRATULATING Prachande the KILLER OF 15000+ people!!!!

Here's some predictions: (1)THE CURRENT GOVT WILL NOT SURVIVE 100 DAYS BEYOPND ITS INCEPTION; (2) There will be infighting in commies and they will breakup; (3) US Govt will NOT RECOGNIZE the maoists govt; AND (4) MAOISTS WILL ACCEPT KING!!!!!!!!!!!!!

India now has maoists/terrorists on its northern borders! India has terrorists coming in from Pak & Bangladesh. INDIA WILL PAY A VERY VERY HEAVY PRICE FOR ITS ILL-DECISIONS AND LACK OF FORESIGHT. India's porblems have just started!!!!!


 
Posted on 04-14-08 4:49 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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No, Now India will play " dirty politics" and this government will be a puppet of India. Or we may have to loose something , You know Mr. Dalvo was close to Indian Embassy.
 
Posted on 04-14-08 9:10 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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India worries over Nepal's future

By Sanjoy Majumder
BBC News, Delhi

Supporters of the Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist) chant slogans during a rally
Nepal's Maoists have been celebrating - but there is concern in India

The strong showing by Nepal's Maoists in the parliamentary elections has taken its influential neighbour India by surprise.  

Diplomats at its sprawling embassy in Kathmandu, its largest mission anywhere, privately concede that it is a result that they hardly expected and least favoured.  

With a strong possibility of the Maoists forming the next government, many in Delhi are wondering where it leaves relations between the two countries.

While India has nurtured some ties with the former rebels, there is growing concern over the Maoists' links with China, and also with India's own troubling Maoist insurgency.  

Reports in the Indian and Nepalese media have quoted Maoist leader Prachanda talking about taking a more "balanced" approach in his country’s dealings with its neighbours.  

Saying that he will develop "new relations" with India, he is reported to have said that Nepal will maintain an equal distance between Delhi and Beijing.  

It is a comment that has already sent policy-makers in Delhi into a tailspin.

Special relationship

Many here are concerned that the Maoists will use their new-found electoral clout as leverage over India.  

"It means that the special relationship between India and Nepal which dates back to British days and 1950 is in its terminal phase," says KV Rajan, a former Indian ambassador to Nepal.

A Treaty of Peace and Friendship, which both countries signed in 1950, defined their political and economic relationship.  

Supporters of the Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist) with Communist flags
Some fear Nepal's Maoists could encourage Maoist rebels in India

Under the Treaty, people living in both countries could freely travel across the border for employment, and could reside in either place.  

It also granted preferential trade arrangements and, until 1969, allowed India to maintain security posts in Nepal's northern border with China, as well as a military mission in Kathmandu.  

India's basic concern, say diplomats, was always China.

Delhi, which had already fought a bitter border war with Beijing in 1962 which it lost comprehensively, was paranoid about China establishing a major presence in Kathmandu.  

Influence

"The 1950 treaty was basically meant to help address India's security needs," says Ambassador Rajan.  

"In return, Nepal got economic benefits, such as the right to live and work in India. That was the basic arrangement."  

But increasingly, many Nepalese were uncomfortable with the Treaty, believing it gave India major political and economic influence.  

The Maoists have regularly raised the issue and said they want the Treaty scrapped.

They also want a review of other agreements, especially those relating to river water and irrigation – issues which are very sensitive on both sides of the border.  

And there is the question of links between the Maoists in Nepal and those in India.  

Security threat

India's bloody Maoist insurgency runs across a broad swathe of its territory from its northern border with Nepal down to its central tribal belt and the southern state of Andhra Pradesh.

It was recently identified by the Indian Prime Minister, Manmohan Singh, as the country's single biggest security threat.  

Security experts believe that the Maoist victory in Nepal will come as a big morale booster to Maoist rebels fighting in India.  

India's problems also stem from the fact that they have traditionally backed the mainstream political parties, particularly the Nepali Congress of the outgoing Prime Minister, Girija Prasad Koirala.  

They have always backed a role for the monarchy, too, albeit one that has changed somewhat over the past two years following the pro-democracy protests of 2006.  

Ironically, many of the senior Maoist leaders have studied in India and would often hide in the country at the height of the insurgency.

Next government

They also have relatively close ties with India’s own mainstream Communist parties, who support the governing coalition in Delhi.  

But their influence is limited, particularly after the Maoists' current political position following the election.  

"We will have to accept that India will have to deal differently with the next government, and accept that Prachanda represents the sensitivities and aspirations of the majority of Nepalese," says one foreign office mandarin who wished to remain unnamed.  

But there are some who believe it is time for relations between both countries to change, and reflect the new realities, rather than be mired in history.  

"Our relation was one between a sovereign country and a semi-protectorate. It now needs to be one of equals," says Ambassador Rajan.  

Ultimately, some believe, India’s importance to Nepal outweighs its political imperatives.  

Both countries have strong cultural, economic and ethnic ties, and India is Nepal's largest neighbour. And many here think that no government can ignore that.

(http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/7347227.stm)


 
Posted on 04-14-08 9:28 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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My personal view is, It's not gonna happen anything regardless who become PM/President. It goes on as it had been. Remember before UML came to the power, they were screaming about Tannakpur, Koshi, 1950 Treaty. What happend?

Indian PM calls Nepalese PM/President for his first visit, gets warm welcome on the red carpet, nice dinner and a wishper in an ear............... next day at the Tribhuvan International Airport, PM says 'India is our closed neighbor, we have had cultural, social, families, economic relations with India, we can't ignor that. I signed some treaty, which benifits Nepal more than India......... we buy 7Rs a unit electricity from India and we sell I2.75Rs" a unit. God bless our leaders.

I bet Prachanda or Babura won't be exceptions. We have to wait until India becomes Singapore then Nepal becomes Thailand, not Switzerland.


 
Posted on 04-14-08 11:06 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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Thanks to you and me for letting this happen. We have made decisions for our own personal progress by coming to US. Any remaining patriotism is mere emotion which has no substance.
The best we can do is send remittance, Help poor children and invest in social causes as best as we can. As far as making any dent in the political arena You must be in Nepal. Otherwise, kaag karaudai garcha pina sukdai garcha.

 
Posted on 04-14-08 11:06 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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Last edited: 14-Apr-08 11:09 PM

 
Posted on 04-14-08 11:58 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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I think now on more people get approved on Asylm here in USA and western countries. Future govt. doesn't have to worry about opening new industries, tourism........... to get more revenue. Put more political prisoner in jail, more people flee the country and  the Maoist govt. gets more remittance.
 
Posted on 04-15-08 12:19 AM     Reply [Subscribe]
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Why we Nepalese think that these Maoists, Parties and Monarchy is an internal issue.  It is a matter of complex foreign affairs and defense.  Common people have no understanding what is going on, and India is succeeding in destabilizing Nepal.   When the Kings of Sikkim, Nepal, Kashmir (Hyderabad and Gwalior) were offered to surrender the defense, and foreign affairs to India, everyone agreed and became the Union of India, except Nepal.  King denied, and since then, Monarchy became a problem for India.  To eradicate Monarchy, India started ruling through its proxy citizens—the Indian Bihari Prime Minister Girija Prasad being a common example in present days.   The Maoists lived in India, parties lived in India, were supported by India, and were successful in launching war against king.  If you read Sikkim’s history, India had successfully executed a plan like this.  I am afraid, Nepal can become another Sikkim.  Learn to understand the foreign affairs here, know India’s reality, and form ways to attack upon India.  Let Indians know what Nepal is.  Dare not Indians presume that we are Sikkimese.  Form a coalition of Nepal, Kashmir, Sikkim, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Tibet and other small countries who don’t like India, and invade it.  That will be the day when true Gurkha blood will show its color. 
 
Posted on 04-15-08 2:34 AM     Reply [Subscribe]
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Don't worry bro, India not gonna invade Nepal. One day Manmohan Singh announces on TV/Radaio that India has been invaded by Nepal. 'chit vi meri pot vi meri' (head and tail, both are mine).


 


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