'CC2C' gaffe fuels demand for 'Greater Nepal'
Jan 27, 2009 Sudeshna SarkarOn Monday, as India celebrated its 60th Republic Day, students staged a noisy protest in front of the Indian Embassy in Kathmandu, asking for the restoration of "Greater Nepal".
Led by a Nepali literature professor, Phanindra Nepal, the Unified Nepal National Front is asking India and Britain to separate certain areas from four Indian states and return them to Nepal since they were part of Nepal's territory in the 19th century.
"If our demand is not heeded now, one day, it is going to become an even bigger issue in India than Kashmir," the 58-year-old Nepali told IANS. "I have visited these areas and found that Nepalis of Indian origin as well as Nepalis forced to seek menial jobs in India support the demand."
The roots of the movement for a "Greater Nepal" go back to the 19th century when Nepal fought a series of grim battles with the British, who had turned their eyes towards the Himalayan kingdom after colonising India.
After several exhausting Anglo-Nepalese Wars, Nepal narrowly averted conquest by agreeing to sign a treaty that however stripped it of almost one-third of its territory.
The infamous Treaty of Sugauli signed in 1816 saw Nepal concede territory in Sikkim, Darjeeling and Siliguri which lie in India's West Bengal state, and territory that now lies in India's Himachal Pradesh and Uttaranchal.
Nepal also lost tracts of fertile land in its southern Terai plains but recovered that from the British later for helping the East India Company in 1857 to put down the Indian rebellion against the colonial rulers.
Now, the Front is seeking to get back the conceded territory that is still part of India.
"This is a just and legitimate demand," says Nepal. "In 1950, an independent India signed a treaty of peace and friendship with Nepal and both sides agreed that the earlier bilateral pacts signed during the British rule stood scrapped.
"Therefore, the Sugauli Treaty is now invalid and India has no further rights to the ceded Nepali territory."
Last year, the Front unveiled a new map of Nepal, depicting the Himalayan republic with the addition of the land lying in India. It also sent a memorandum to Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh as well as Britain's Queen Elizabeth II, pointing out that Britain also has the responsibility of resolving the dispute since it was party to it.
Nepal says that India has a precedent of returning ceded territory.
"The Indo-Bhutan Treaty of 1949 returned to Bhutan a 32 sq km strip of land known as Diwangiri," it says.
Nepal feels the demand would become a mass movement once Nepalis realise how they would benefit from it.
"Nepal would get back about 100,000 sq km," he says. "It will extend Nepal's borders till Bhutan and Bangladesh.
"This means Nepal will no longer be bound by India or dependent on it for trade."
The Front is trying to cash in on the fresh anti-Indian feeling that arose after the Bollywood film "Chandni Chowk to China" wrongly stated that the Buddha was born in India, instead of Nepal.
Monday's rally called the film an attack on Nepal's sovereignty and underlined the need for a Greater Nepal. Click the Movie button below for more info:
Chandni Chowk To China
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