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Book Review | How India, Nepal let each other down

The book covers the past seven decades

Among all its neighbours in South Asia, India perhaps enjoys the most unique relationship with Nepal. But it is also a history of sharp fluctuations. The open border, based on the treaty of peace and friendship and longstanding people-to-people contacts of kinship and culture have allowed not only free movement of people and goods but also for millions of Nepali citizens to live and work in India. Yet, deep distrust and misunderstanding has often come to the fore. In recent years, China’s growing footsteps in Nepal has only complicated matters.

Kathmandu Chronicle: Reclaiming India-Nepal Relations, a new book co-authored by ex-diplomat K.V. Rajan and policy professional Atul K. Thakur, marries the diplomatic skills and experience of the former Indian ambassador to Nepal with the latter’s fieldwork and independent research. It also successfully unravels the many factors that have beleaguered this relationship.

The book covers the past seven decades. It spans King Tribhuvan’s dramatic escape to India, strains in bilateral relations under Mahendra’s monarchy as India pursued its “twin pillar” strategy to deal with the king as well as democratically elected leaders, the Indian Airlines aircraft IC-814’s hijack from Kathmandu, progress in India-Nepal relations under King Birendra until his brutal murder in the palace massacre, the rise of the Maoists and the abolition of monarchy, ending in the conversion of the erstwhile Hindu kingdom into a republic.

“There was a certain haste with which a few bureaucrats pushed Nepal’s political parties to end the monarchy,” writes Rajan in his account of the fast-paced events in the book. Though the authors are critical of past political leaderships and their policies, they conclude on a hopeful note, especially on the current decision of Delhi to raise the economic stakes of Kathmandu and make it a part of India’s growth story.

The book’s candid admission of the flaws in past policies and objective analysis may allow it to find space in the bookshelves of those who remain interested in strong bilateral ties between India and Nepal.

Kathmandu Chronicle

By K.V. Rajan and Atul K. Thakur

Penguin

pp. 258; Rs 499

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