13 Responses to “In Dependence”

In Dependence

Tuesday, November 18th, 2015
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This is not an Indian blockade, it is an Indian siege
India-Nepal relations by Subhas Rai

Nepalis are proud to proclaim that we are South Asia’s oldest nation state and that we were never colonised. We fought off the East India Company, but when the British laid a siege to Kathmandu Valley in 1816 we sued for peace. The Sugauli Treaty amputated half of Nepal’s territory so the rest could remain independent.
Sovereignty is a relative concept. Independence is seldom an absolute, and is even less so in an interdependent, globalised economy. Small countries throughout history have devised pragmatic ways to accommodate belligerent larger neighbours. Throughout the Cold War, Finland came up with a clever plan to coexist with the Soviet Union, winning its trust and profiting vastly from being the conduit for most of Moscow’s trade with the west.  That symbiotic relationship across the Iron Curtain came to be known somewhat derogatorily as ‘Finlandisation’, but it allowed Helsinki the elbowroom to exercise national sovereignty despite the Russian Bear breathing down its neck.
Other countries in Eastern Europe like Hungary and Czechoslovakia strained at the leash and paid a heavy price for standing up to Moscow: they suffered full-scale military invasions. Even after the Soviet Union broke up into little pieces Putin’s Russia is still using the iron fist approach in Georgia and Ukraine. The United States, too, has intervened covertly and overtly all over the Americas (and the world) to stop left-leaning governments from coming to power.
Closer to home, smaller countries on India’s periphery are all pulled by its gravity to varying degrees. Even leaving aside Pakistan, New Delhi’s relations with its neighbours have been characterised by chronic friction. Being too strategic for its own good, Sikkim got swallowed up in 1975. India midwifed the birth of Bangladesh, but bilateral relations have always been rocky. Sri Lanka’s Tamil separatist war became an extension of Tamil Nadu state politics, sucked India into a military quagmire, and lead to the assassination of Rajiv Gandhi by a suicide bomber in 1991. Bhutan’s rulers have decided that India’s presence is a given, and have leveraged partial sovereignty for economic bonanza from hydropower exports.  Even so, the rulers of Druk Yul sometimes run afoul of Delhi as they did in 2013 when India flexed its muscles by blockading gas supplies.
Nepal’s Anglophile Rana rulers since Jang Bahadur decided that Britain was too powerful to go to war with to regain territory lost in 1816. Independent India inherited some of the divide and rule tactics of the British in Kathmandu, but it must be said that they did it a lot more crudely. During the Nehru years, the 30-years of Panchayat, through the post-democracy period of the 1990s and the decade of conflict, India has behaved like an overbearing, arm-twisting, neighbourhood toughie. There have been only a few years during which bilateral relations could be termed healthy and harmonious. Most Indian politicians, bureaucrats and diplomats have come across as petulant and mean, while many Nepali leaders have been either utterly servile or thoughtlessly confrontational.
That there have been two Indian blockades before this, the last one in 1988-89 when the Indo-Nepal border was sealed for 13 months, should have given a succession of Nepal’s rulers sufficient time to implement a long-term strategy for self-reliance and import-diversification. We did neither, and the most glaring impact of those failures are here for all to see during these past two months: an economy hopelessly hooked to petroleum, electricity rationing in a country that should be producing a surplus for export, a highway artery linking Kathmandu to India that takes an absurd 200 km detour, maintaining only one tenuous highway link to the northern border, actively discouraging electric public transport, etc.
All we have heard from elected politicians over the last 25 years are wild promises to turn Nepal into Switzerland or Singapore, platitudes about hydropower, hollow pledges about developing agriculture. No action, no preparation, no alternatives. A country can only be politically independent if its domestic affairs are in order and its economy is on a healthy growth trajectory. Which is why Nepal today is not independent, but independence.
India’s rulers may be behaving like the boors they are, but our nationalistic bravado is not backed up by an ability to stand on our own feet. A state may be weak, but it must compensate for its smallness with smarts. We must fix our domestic issues ourselves, and understand Indian sensibilities to negotiate for the concessions we need.
For its part, India should pick someone its size. This is not an Indian blockade, it is an Indian siege. Nepal’s hospitals are running out of emergency medicines, earthquake survivors haven’t got relief and an entire country of 30 million is being held hostage. The Buddha is not smiling.
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  1. ACW  on Says:
    Of course, the Buddha is smiling. He may simply be smiling on somebody else. The Buddha is in favor of learning and knowledge. Your enemy can be your greatest teacher. Release yourself from attachment to such things as petrol.

  2. ACW on Says:
    As an Indian living in Nepal since 2000, I’ve seen our handling of Nepal internal affairs first hand and it is not a pretty sight. Modi is troubling Indians too – look at the way he blocking the Delhi government from doing anything with regard to law and order. He is a sore loser and is willing to go a mile for people who adore him (his 1 billion USD soft loan and the subsequent commitments during the donor meeting for Nepal’s reconstruction effort), but acts like a bully when people are not willing to agree with his view. He is a typical right winger – issues are totally black and white and my way or highway kind of thinking.
    The people of Bihar taught him a lesson, but we still have 3.5 years of his crude politics. He is surrounded by completely incompetent ministers (except 3 or 4 of them) and he thinks he is a CEO of a corporation rather than a PM of a democracy. He reached where he is by being a bully and that is the way he is wired. If Nepali politicians think that he is going to back down, they are in for a long wait.
    Having said that, as a Nepali tax payer for the last 15 years, I’ve also seen Nepali politicians of every hue and color sell their souls to the Indian establishment. You just need to see the list of students who get a scholarship from the embassy – how many of them got it because of a politician’s recommendation rather than pure merit/need? Priorities are completely screwed up. How is electing a president/vice president/appointing six deputy PMs more important than getting gas to the corner momo pushcart seller who is now unable to even eke out a living.
    My reading is that Nepal, at this point in time, lacks a statesman who can negotiate with the agitating groups (Madhesi’s, Tharu’s and peeved Indian establishment) and come to an agreement where everyone is able to walk away looking like they won the argument. At this point in time treating this whole issue as a zero-sum game is not the option. Waving flags and giving nationalistic speeches when a bully is holding a gun to your head is definitely not a smart move.
    My bet is that once this issue gets to some sort of resolution, everything will go back to status quo and there will be zero/watered down efforts at improving roads to China. The flow of Nepali politicians to the embassy will resume and common Nepali’s interests would have been sold for a song.

  3. Mukunda Dhakal onSays:
    This article seems to have been written in a rush because it has a number of inaccuracies -not least the fact that India blockaded our great nation from 1989 to 1990.

  4. Bimal Rawal Says:
    Very well articulated and I fully endorse that we have no one but ourselves and our leaders to blame. :(

  5. Ryan Dhakal onSays:
    Very informative, and amazingly well written!

  6. Raj Khanal onSays:
    Very good article. If India can claim Kohinoor why not Nepal claim its territory which was taken by East India Company.

  7. Uday Lama on Says:
    Both, in time of sorry and happiness, song soothes the soul of an individual as well as of a nation. I realize these are hard time for Nepal and the Nepalese. As Mr. Dixit’s article suggests, most of the misfortunes have befallen upon Nepalese as a result of their own shortsightedness, ignorance and inability – for whatever reason or reasons. Let’s all sing together a song as a national nepenthe. Can a Nepali musician provide music to the following lyrics?
    KE GERNE, KE GERNE, ABA BHAYO ASAY
    KHAI KASAI, KHAI KASAI
    KE GERNE, KE GERNE, ABA BHAYO ASAY

  8. Alex onSays:
    This bravado by nationalists is not going to solve anything. This is similar to North Korean bravado against the Americans. The euphoria of Chinese oil has already met its Himalayan death. What Nepal needs is three hundred oil trucks a day and what’s coming from the Northern border is 5 trucks days and that is the reality. Barging on social media on birth place of Buddha and that Nepal has been never occupied is not going to get the oil to ordinary citizens.. The problem has been the new govt of Oli, which has completely failed in diplomacy. Playing China card at a time when China itself is opening itself to India after the US navy trespassing, it’s claimed territory in south China Sea. Most of Chinese energy come through the mallaca straights and India sits in these sea lanes in the Indian ocean. India has the aces and China know it’s limitations in the IOR. So Nepali govt diplomacy is not looking at the geopolitics of the world and the region but only flaming anti-India sentiments which India knows is not more than bravado and doesn’t care about. Let’s see if this anti-India bravado on social media by Nepali warriors can get enough fuel before winter sets in.

  9. Bijaya onSays:
    Many thanks for this very frank and down to earth write up. We need to take it to the people with the message that we can not be independent till we clean our own mess. Can it be published in Nepali as well for the wider benefits.

  10. Khagendra onSays:
    Great, timely article. Also great comment from ACW-sadly it will all probably come to pass.

  11. Daniel Gajaraj onSays:
    Gurkha Card is even mightier than the China Card,( if there is any.)
    Gurkhas are the marines of the Indian Army. Indian army Chief very well is acquainted about its ramification. He cannot afford to make their forces family in distress for a long time. The participation of Gurkha -family in London demonstration has shown the way.There are a large number of Indian army pensioners in Nepal.
    China is drilling deep in the Tibet Region for gas and oil, secretly. It came to the knowledge of the western journalist world only in 2014, April, as per the South China Morning Post. So keep planning for the future without making noise.
    Nepalese leaders and planners must build the road links with Tibet on their own, first and foremost. So that the aid agencies or India- China themselves take up the project to enhance them to their requirement and commercial
    standard later on.
    But at this outset we must address the essential concerns or interest of our nearest neighbour India. India also must accept our vital interest, which we cannot compromise. We must keep our tent apart, but let us keep our hearts together. We must expand the people to people relation between our two country.
    Finlandization is the order of the day, it is real politics.

  12. namah on Says:
    @ACW: great analysis.

  13. Roman Karki on Says:
    I do agree. While the situation we are in right now cannot be solely blamed on a single actor. The government needs to realistically acknowledge the situation and react with tact. Pointing fingers and waiting to be saved like a scorned damsel in distress, is not the way to go. The long term picture and the present picture need to be kept in mind accordingly.
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