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China-Nepal Cooperation: News & Updates

Experts urge for Nepal's participation in China-proposed Belt and Road initiative
(Xinhua) 11:02, March 18, 2017

KATHMANDU, March 17 -- Experts on Friday urged the Nepalese leadership to ensure Nepal's participation in the China-proposed Belt and Road initiative by signing a cooperation agreement with the Chinese government as early as possible.

Speaking at a one-day conference on the initiative, participants talked about shared benefits to Nepal and China and South Asia through building the Belt and Road based on mutual consultation and collaboration.

The government should not delay its participation in the Belt and Road initiative, Nepal's former ambassador to Russia Hiranya Lal Shrestha said.

It is high time for the Nepalese leadership to seriously think and make a decision, he said.

Highlighting various aspects of the Belt and Road initiative, Executive Director of the Kathmandu School of Law Yubaraj Sangroula said that Nepal will be the largest beneficiary of the initiative if it signs the cooperation agreement with China.

Acting Chairman of China Study Center Sundarnath Bhattarai said that Nepal's participation in the initiative will bring immense opportunities for Nepal.

Delivering remarks as a special guest of the conference, Chinese Ambassador to Nepal Yu Hong said that China hopes Nepal would become a member of the Belt and Road initiative soon.

The ambassador said that as many as 100 countries have expressed their intentions to support and contribute to the Belt and Road initiative while over 50 countries and international organizations have signed cooperation agreements with China for jointly building the Belt and Road.

The initiative, proposed by China in 2013, aims to build a trade and infrastructure network connecting Asia with Europe and Africa along the ancient trade routes.
 
China's NGO rebuilds quake-damaged school in Nepal
Xinhua, May 1, 2017

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A place in Kathmandu, capital of Nepal before the earthquake [File photo by Chen Boyuan / China.org.cn]

The China Foundation for Poverty Alleviation (CFPA), a Chinese NGO, started rebuilding a quake-damaged school in Nepal on Sunday.

The groundbreaking ceremony of the Mahendra Adarsha Vidyashram public school was held in Nepal's Lalitpur district with the presence of Chinese delegates, local leaders, students and their parents.

The school is being rebuilt by the CFPA under the financial support from He Daofeng and his wife Angela He. He is the former executive vice president of the CFPA.

The program is expected to provide a safe study space for almost 1,000 students.

"This school is for common people and families. It can provide opportunity of quality education and vocational training to needy. I always want to help the people who need it the most," He told Xinhua.

Mahendra Adarsha Vidyashram, founded in 1958, is a well-known public secondary school in the Valley. Out of two buildings damaged during the devastating earthquake in 2015, one building is being constructed under the Chinese support while the school management committee will construct another one.

The construction of the new two-storey building is expected to be completed within a year.

The Chinese delegates also distributed bags and stationery items to the students.

Expressing appreciation to the Chinese organization for helping the education sector of quake-hit Nepal, the school officials said such assistance will strengthen the people-to-people ties.

Pampha Bhusal, chairman of the school committee, said "We are very happy to get this support. We were in dire need of school building and the support came from people of our neighboring country, so we are very thankful to them."

In addition, the foundation also handed over a computer lab donated by the South South Education Foundation to enable students to have more access to information and advanced education.

The CFPA, which has been focusing on education and health sector of Nepal right after the 2015 disaster, is investing 2.7 million yuan (390,000 U.S. dollars) for reconstruction of two school buildings in Kathmandu valley.

It has carried out more than 15 projects in the sectors like disaster relief, food, water and sanitation, disinfection treatment, health care and materials distribution.
 
Chinese cultural exhibition held in Nepal

Nepali people visit a stall during the opening of China Intangible Cultural Heritage Week in Kathmandu, Nepal, June 22, 2017. A week-long exhibition on China Intangible Culture kicked off here on Thursday, offering Nepalese an opportunity to gain an insight into the rich and abundant Chinese history and culture. (Xinhua/Sunil Sharma)


Nepali girls observe an art piece with an exhibitor during the opening of China Intangible Cultural Heritage Week in Kathmandu, Nepal, June 22, 2017. A week-long exhibition on China Intangible Culture kicked off here on Thursday, offering Nepalese an opportunity to gain an insight into the rich and abundant Chinese history and culture. (Xinhua/Sunil Sharma)


Nepali school children gather to observe the exhibition during the opening of China Intangible Cultural Heritage Week in Kathmandu, Nepal, June 22, 2017. A week-long exhibition on China Intangible Culture kicked off here on Thursday, offering Nepalese an opportunity to gain an insight into the rich and abundant Chinese history and culture. (Xinhua/Sunil Sharma)


Nepali students visit a stall during the opening of China Intangible Cultural Heritage Week in Kathmandu, Nepal, June 22, 2017. A week-long exhibition on China Intangible Culture kicked off here on Thursday, offering Nepalese an opportunity to gain an insight into the rich and abundant Chinese history and culture. (Xinhua/Sunil Sharma)


Nepali people visit a stall during the opening of China Intangible Cultural Heritage Week in Kathmandu, Nepal, June 22, 2017. A week-long exhibition on China Intangible Culture kicked off here on Thursday, offering Nepalese an opportunity to gain an insight into the rich and abundant Chinese history and culture. (Xinhua/Sunil Sharma)


http://www.china.org.cn/photos/2017-06/23/content_41083156_5.htm

 
China should offer more generous aid to Nepal amid Sino-Indian border dispute
By Wang Jiamei Source:Global Times Published: 2017/8/14

Wang’s visit puts Nepal in spotlight amid Sino-Indian border dispute, trade friction

Chinese Vice Premier Wang Yang's official visit to Nepal, which runs from Monday to Thursday, has put the Himalayan country under the spotlight, given the ongoing border standoff between China and India.

While Wang's visit will reportedly focus on China-sponsored infrastructure projects, the timing speaks for itself. The border dispute with India has highlighted the necessity for China to accelerate investment and economic aid to Nepal.

Nepal has told its embassies in New Delhi and Beijing that it will maintain an independent and neutral position on its neighbors' standoff, and it will not be influenced by either China or India, according to media reports. For a landlocked country that shares a long open border with India and depends heavily on India for imports and exports, Nepal's stance clearly shows its intention of counterbalancing Indian influence. That stance also reflects China's diplomatic efforts in recent years.

With an eye on the rising geopolitical significance of Nepal in the region, China has been strengthening ties with that country in recent years, mainly through infrastructure investment.

For instance, in March this year, China committed foreign direct investment of $8.2 billion to the Himalayan country out of total pledges of $13.52 billion received at the Nepal Investment Summit, a report from the Xinhua News Agency said. The Chinese pledges overshadowed India's commitment of $317 million at the same event.

In May, China and Nepal signed an agreement under theBelt and Road initiative to promote cooperation in infrastructure connectivity. There have also been media reports about feasibility studies for a railway connecting Kathmandu to Lhasa, with an estimated cost of $8 billion.

But infrastructure investment alone is not enough for China to maintain a close relationship with Nepal, one of the world's poorest countries. It is essential for China to further increase investment as well as economic aid to the country so as to revive its ailing economy. Such aid could include but not be limited to financial incentives, education, medical assistance and workforce training.

In addition, Nepal, which borders Southwest China's Tibet Autonomous Region, has played an important role in guarding against Tibetan separatists.

There is every reason for China to offer more generous aid to such a small but important neighbor.

The author is a reporter with the Global Times. bizopinion@globaltimes.com.cn
Newspaper headline: Wang’s visit puts Nepal in spotlight amid Sino-Indian border dispute, trade friction
 
Productive five years in Nepal-China relations

By Leela Mani Paudyal
Source:Global Times Published: 2017/10/19


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Nepalese Ambassador to China Leela Mani Paudyal Photo: Yin Yeping/GT

The age-old relations between Nepal and China have continued to go from strength to strength after the establishment of diplomatic relations in 1955. These time-tested relations are marked by profound friendship, deep understanding and appreciation of each other's aspirations and sensitivities. Nepal highly values its relations with China as a trusted all-weather friend. Our relations have continued to flourish despite major political changes in Nepal and in the global arena. China's support for the independence, sovereignty and territorial integrity of Nepal without interfering in its internal affairs is a special feature of Nepal-China relations. In response, Nepal abides by its commitment to the one-China policy, which is also an integral part of our foreign policy.

The past five years have seen a remarkable expansion and deepening of relations between Nepal and China on many fronts. More than 35 important high-level visits between the two countries have taken place in those five years. Over two dozen agreements were signed during the period, including the Transport and Transit Agreement and Memorandum of Understanding on joint implementation of the Belt and Road initiative.

Currently, more than 5,000 students are studying Chinese language at the Confucius Institute at Kathmandu University, and around 200 Nepali students are studying Chinese language in several universities across China. Five years back, these numbers were insignificant. Such cooperation is expected to help enhance Nepal's technical capabilities, and contribute to the country's socioeconomic progress.

Tourism and investment are two potential areas for win-win cooperation between Nepal and China. Nepal offers unparalleled opportunities for tourists to enjoy natural beauty and cultural traditions. China is the largest source of outbound tourists with the highest per capita expenditures. China is the second-largest source country in terms of tourist arrivals in Nepal since 2014. China has declared 2017 as Nepal Tourism Promotion Year in China.

Similarly, Nepal has historically served as an important lynchpin in connecting South Asia with Central and East Asia. Today, the Silk Road initiative can play a vital role in revitalizing the trade routes in the region. Nepal has abundant natural resources, whereas Chinese enterprises have the technological know-how and financial resources for investments. Under the Belt and Road initiative, Chinese investors may utilize the investment opportunities in Nepal for mutual benefit. In 2016, China occupied the top position in terms of the inflow of foreign direct investment in Nepal. China's grant assistance has made it one of the largest of the development partners supporting Nepal, and has increased manifold in the past five years.

Nepal and China are both countries with high incidences of earthquake and flood-related disasters. Therefore, there is great scope for mutual cooperation between the two countries in disaster preparedness, relief and reconstruction. Following the earthquakes of 2015, China was one of the most significant providers of support for Nepal.

The Belt and Road initiative proposed by Chinese President Xi Jinping four years ago is an epoch-making proposal that has injected hope for inclusive development with a view to creating a harmonious society. Nepal has signed an MoU for joint development of BRI for common prosperity and regional stability. There is enormous future potential for trade and investments between China and South Asia. The Himalayan passes at the Nepal-China border have served as important gateways for travelers between China and South Asia for centuries. The time is ripe to revive the ancient glory acquired from exchanges between China and South Asia, and Nepal stands ready to offer its support for integration toward common prosperity.

The development of infrastructure along the trans-Himalayan region is crucial for promoting economic opportunities to ensure efficient movement of people and goods across the region. Regional cooperation and understanding is required to optimize the benefits of trans-Himalayan connectivity.

Nepal and China should focus their cooperation arrangement on building critical railway infrastructure in the Himalayan region and remove barriers for a seamless movement of people, goods and services.

The author of this article is the Nepalese Ambassador to China
 
As China, Nepal try to clear last hurdles for new train route, India’s anxiety is aggravated
By Zhang Yiqian Source:Global Times Published: 2017/12/5 19:02:40

Sino-Nepalese railway will boost trade between multiple countries

A team of Chinese railway officials and experts recently visited Nepal to assess the feasibility of cross-border railway connectivity

Talks of a China-Nepal railway have been active for years, with the Chinese government pushing for its development in order to benefit both sides economically and culturally

Expert say the construction of the railway on Nepal's side will be affected by the upcoming Nepalese elections


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People ride atop a train in Janakpur, Nepal. Photo: VCG

A team of high-level Chinese officials and experts recently completed a land inspection trip in Nepal for the construction of a China-Nepal railway.

The team of 23 was led by Zheng Jian, deputy director of National Railway Administration of China, who met with the Nepali Ministry of Physical Infrastructure and Transport on November 10, after completing field trips to Gyirong, Pokhara and Lumbini.

According to the Kathmandu Post, Nepali Department of Railways spokesperson Prakash Bhakta Upadhayaya said that the Chinese team resolved many technical issues, especially geological ones.

"Altitude variation between Syaprubeshi and Gyirong and the gap created between Indian and Tibetan tectonic plates after the 2015 earthquake were major concerns. This Chinese team of experts has cleared out our concerns, paving way for development of railroads in the country," Upadhayaya told the Kathmandu Post.

He said that the Chinese team has assured the technical support required for this project. Nepal and China have also agreed to expedite cooperation in the field of cross-border railway connectivity.

Long in the making

Sun Lizhou, an international relations expert from Tsinghua University, has followed the progress of the project closely. He told the Global Times that time varies from project to project, from the moment an inspection team is sent out until construction begins.

The development of projects between China and Nepal has been affected by geopolitics.

Over the years, China and Nepal have held several rounds of talks, both formal and informal, about possible cross-border railways, especially under the Belt and Road initiative.

In 2006, Qiangba Puncog, the then-chairman of the government of China's Tibet Autonomous Region, told Sharma Oli, who was then deputy prime minister of Nepal, that the Qinghai-Tibet railway would be extended from Lhasa to Xigaze, Tibet Autonomous Region and then to the Sino-Nepalese border.

In March 2016, the Nepali prime minister signed 10 agreements with China during the Boao Forum for Asia, including plans to establish railways between the two countries.

In May 2017, during a bilateral meeting in Beijing, Chinese Vice Premier Wang Yang told Nepal's Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Krishna Bahadur Mahara that China was willing to push for the steady development of basic infrastructure projects between the two countries, such as road and railway construction.

There were further meetings between China and Nepal in September of this year, when Mahara held a bilateral delegation-level meeting with Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi while visiting Beijing.

Soon after this year's 19th National Congress of the Communist Party of China, a high-level Chinese delegation was dispatched to Nepal to carry out an inspection of the technical feasibility of the railway.

China's National Railway Administration said that, in Nepal, China has made developing the cross-border railway "a high priority," according to Xinhua News Agency.

On the Chinese side, the extension of the railway from Xigaze in Tibet to the China-Nepal border port of Gyirong is being carried out and will be completed by 2020.

The railway is part of China's greater plan to connect neighboring countries with roads and railways in every direction. Foreign media outlets have commented that China is executing "railway diplomacy."

Toward the West, there are three China-Europe cargo train rails, two rails between China and Kazakhstan and discussions of a railway project connecting China, Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan, Afghanistan and Iran.

To the South, the China-Laos railway is expected to be finished by the end of 2020, and Thailand has recently approved a China-Thailand rail to begin construction this year.


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Boost in cross-border trade

For Chinese companies trading with Nepal, the most convenient means of transportation is rail shipping from cities in Tibet to the Nepal's capital, Kathmandu. The railway's extension from Xigaze to Gyirong is highly anticipated.

The Guangdong-Tibet-Central South Asia freight train was launched based on the premise that it would link China and Nepal, an official in Lhasa involved with the project, who preferred not to be named, told the Global Times in a previous report.

"The China-Nepal railway remains a bottleneck for the economic corridor of South Asia, as the most challenging part is still in Nepal," he said.

Many experts also look forward to the railway. Sun told the Global Times that if China and Nepal are connected by rail, trade volume will be increased, with China receiving an all-new market with a 29 million population.

Sun thinks inconvenient transportation is the primary reason why Nepal's economy has fallen behind other Asian nations. Presently, a 1,389-kilometer shared border separates China and Nepal, but there are only two trading posts, both on roads, along the route.

Furthermore, after the railway is completed, the development of cross-border trade between Bhutan, Bangladesh and China via Nepal will also thrive.

When Sun visited Nepal in 2016, he spoke with more than 200 people from all walks of life, asking for their honest opinions about the China-Nepal railway. Most showed their support.

Sun also believes that the China-Nepal railway will be advantageous to Nepal's national unity, as it could as it could encourage Nepal to maintain national unity and lessen its reliance on India.

"It will provide freedom and make it smoother to select suitable markets for the Nepalese. It will help Nepal to manage the trade deficit. It will play an important role to develop and flourish the trade, economic, social, cultural, religious and practical relations between China and Nepal," said Prem Sagar Poudel, Chairman of the Nepal-China Mutual Cooperation Society.

Pressure from India

When news of a Chinese surveying team arriving in Nepal got out, there was a strong response from the Indian side. There were also reports of Nepal "choosing China" as a new strategic partner so as to lower its dependence on, or "counterbalancing" against, India. Media reported the railway as "a bid to reduce landlocked Nepal's dependence on India for supplies."

Thinktank researchers in India also expressed concern that China's Qinghai-Tibet railway could impact India's national security by having the ability to send troops and war-time supplies directly to border regions.

Tsinghua's international relations expert, Sun, told the Global Times that India has been concerned about the construction of the China-Nepal railway.

"For years, India fully penetrated Nepal's government, army and main political parties, preventing Nepal from getting closer to China," he said.

Poudel told the Global Times that India doesn't want Nepal to fall out of its control.

"India clearly knows that if Nepal and China's relationship becomes strong, then India can't use Nepal's natural resources like now. They will lose the monopoly over water resources, herbs, mines etc.," he said.

Sun thinks China should push forward for the development of the project even if it makes India "a little uncomfortable."

But the continuation of the railway on Nepal's side will be affected largely by the upcoming results of Nepal's national election, he added.

"Foreign pressure and interruptions can delay the Chinese railway line project, but no one can stop this project. Its process is moving ahead in a slow motion, but it is moving continuously nonetheless," Poudel said.
 
December 10, 2017 / 9:49 PM / Updated 14 hours ago
Nepal's Oli, most likely next PM, wins parliament seat
Gopal Sharma

KATHMANDU (Reuters) - Former Nepali prime minister K.P. Oli on Sunday looked set for a return to power after winning his seat in parliament and his Communist UML party and Maoist allies on course to win a majority.

Counting is still under way following an election on Thursday that capped a near-decade long transition to democracy from monarchy and a civil war in which more than 17,000 people died.

Oli, 65, has vowed to form a government that lasts its full five-year term, something no prime minister has achieved since parliamentary democracy was established in 1990.

His campaign has called for the extension of the Chinese railway network into Nepal and implement of hydroelectric, airport and other infrastructure projects to create jobs.

“We can expect Oli to lead a stable government with the Maoists as strong allies,” said Bipin Adhikari, a constitutional expert. “Once there is political stability he can implement a development agenda and attract foreign investment.”

Instability has spooked investors, curbed growth, spurred corruption and slowed reconstruction after a 2015 earthquake that killed 9,000 people.

Nepal is a natural buffer between China and India, with the ruling Nepali Congress party considered pro-India and the left alliance seen closer to China.

“If Oli leads the new government, he will be forced to be pragmatic in maintaining a geo-political balance with both,” said Kunda Dixit, editor of the weekly Nepali Times.

Final election results are expected to take about a week, election officials said.

Home to Mount Everest, Nepal is one of the world’s poorest countries.

Reporting by Gopal Sharma; editing by Sanjeev Miglani and Jason Neely


Nepal's Oli, most likely next PM, wins parliament seat | Reuters



With wide margin, Oli wins federal election from Jhapa-5 - Kathmandu Tribune - Nepal's National Online Daily
 
Nepal revives Chinese dam project, assures good ties with India

Alok Gupta
2017-12-15 16:04 GMT+8

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A coalition of communist parties set to form a new government in Nepal has decided to maintain a balanced relation with both China and India. Plans are also afoot to review scrapped infrastructure projects prepared in collaboration with China.

The Communist Party of Nepal-Maoist Center (CPN) and Unified Marxist Leninist (UML) have performed well in the recent election; they will take over the regime in landlocked Nepal early next year.

Ishwor Pokhrel, the general secretary of the alliance, maintained that after forming the new government, Nepal would revisit agreements with China.

Nepal would implement a 15-point joint communique signed by Khadga Prasad Oli and Chinese Premier Li Keqiang in March 2016 that covered transportation, trade, and financial cooperation, Pokhrel told South China Morning Post.

The coalition is witnessing massive public support, and Oli is likely to become Nepal’s new prime minister. Pokhrel pointed out that his party was neither "anti-India" nor "pro-China." "Nepal is having many existing trade and transit agreements with New Delhi," he said.

Nepal's government had earlier canceled the mega Budhi Gandaki Hydropower Project proposed to be built in collaboration with Chinese company Gezhouba Water and Power (Group) Co Ltd. The 2.5-billion-US-dollar project proposes to construct a dam for generating 1,200 MW of electricity.

Ahead of the elections, Kamal Thapa, Nepal’s deputy prime minister, last month mentioned the cancellation of the project.

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Kamal Thapa, Nepal’s deputy prime minister, tweet about scrapping the hydropower project. /Twitter

He tweeted on November 13, "The agreement is marred by irregularities with the Chinese company, Gezhouba Group, regarding the construction of Budhi Gandaki hydropower project, has been canceled in a cabinet meeting and as directed by the parliamentary committee."

India’s National Hydroelectric Power Corporation had shown a keen interest in the bidding for the project after the Nepali government canceled the project citing financial irregularities.

Pokhrel, general secretary of the CPN-UML coalition, ahead of the government formation has announced, Nepal will soon review scrapping of the Budhi Gandaki project to be built by China.

Landlocked Nepal dependence on India and China


Nepal is heavily dependent on India and China for transit and transport points; the Himalayan country doesn’t have a single seaport. Much of the trade and supply of fuel is carried out through two neighboring nations.

After the massive devastation in the earthquake of 2015, India had sent relief teams and materials for rebuilding the crumbled infrastructure. India's kind gesture won accolades from the Nepali government.

A few months after the earthquake, Nepal faced the worst crisis of fuel during the Madhesi movement that led to a blockade of fuel and essential goods from India. The Nepali government blamed India for not resolving the dispute leading to sour relations between the two countries.

The stir caused long hours of power cuts and rationing of cooking gas for nearly over six months. Concerned over the dependence on India, Oli traveled to China in 2016 to sign a transit agreement to get access to more ports and railway networks.

The senior members of the coalition are also planning to speed up projects planned under the Belt and Road initiative.
 
It's just a game, you win some, you lose some, the key is never stop playing. SL will be next when our fortune turns, we managed to get Hambantota, next will be getting a naval base?
 
It's just a game, you win some, you lose some, the key is never stop playing. SL will be next when our fortune turns, we managed to get Hambantota, next will be getting a naval base?

Yes, we need to keep playing the long game without being distracted too much by the bumps and highs that are normal for a long-cast strategy.

India's obsession with short term gains and face saving moves are valuable assets, but, what is the most important is that we stick with the plan (while updating/improving) without letting to be forced to act reactively).

We need to force India to play to the tune of our moves.
 
Chinese company to set up cement factory in Nepal

2017-12-28 13:16 Xinhua Editor: Gu Liping

Investment Board Nepal (IBN) and Huaxin Cement Narayani Private Limited have signed a Project Investment Agreement (PIA) for the Chinese firm to set up a cement factory in Nepal.

The PIA came weeks after Nepal's Department of Mines and Geology (DoMG) awarded a limestone mine in Dhading district in central Nepal to the Chinese company.

The DoMG on Wednesday invited Huaxin to sign an agreement regarding the detail exploration of the mine within 30 days.

IBN's Chief Executive Officer Maha Prasad Adhikari and Liu Jianguo, overseas development director of Huaxin, signed the initial PIA, according to a statement issued by the IBN.

"This agreement has conveyed message to the foreign investors that Nepal is attractive place to invest," said Adhikari. "Once the company starts producing cement, there will be availability of quality cements."

Huaxin is bringing the second largest foreign direct investment (FDI) in Nepal's cement sector with the IBN on Dec. 20, 2015 approving the company's FDI pledge of 140 million U.S. dollar. Initially, it will be producing 3,000 tons of cement per day, according to the IBN.

Another Chinese company Hongshi Cement has also entered into Nepal's cement sector with investment of 360 million U.S. dollar under a joint venture arrangement with Nepal's Shivam Group. The joint venture company Hongshi-Shivam Cement has been constructing factory in Nepal's southern Nawalparasi district.

According to the IBN, Huaxin will be setting up its cement factory soon. "After acquiring mine, it now can find location of setting up the factory," an official of the IBN told Xinhua.

http://www.ecns.cn/business/2017/12-28/286251.shtml
 
Yes, we need to keep playing the long game without being distracted too much by the bumps and highs that are normal for a long-cast strategy.

India's obsession with short term gains and face saving moves are valuable assets, but, what is the most important is that we stick with the plan (while updating/improving) without letting to be forced to act reactively).

We need to force India to play to the tune of our moves.
Not sure they can afford to play a big boys game. First they should try to feed their poor. No point wasting millions playing a zero sum game. Most Chinese investments are dual purpose, commercial and strategic. They need to start thinking strategically not reactively. They will end up burning their pockets.
 
Chinese doctors winning hearts of Nepali patients
By Ritu Raj Subedi
China.org.cn, January 2, 2018

Chinese doctors are further expanding Nepal-China relations at the people-to-people level with their invaluable medical services to needy patients in various Nepalese villages.

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Doctors and nurses of China's Chengdu Military Medical Team give a surgery to a quake victim in Kathmandu, Nepal, May 10, 2015. [File photo]

A team of 17 doctors from China's Sichuan Province conducted a week-long medical camp in six different places located in the Kathmandu, Bhaktapur, Lalitpur and Kavrepalanchowk districts Dec. 11-19. TheArniko Society, an organization of Nepalese who have studied in China, facilitated the visit.

Enhancing mutual cooperation and ties through offering various medical services certainly forms part of the Belt and Road Initiative.

After receiving treatment and undergoing Chinese traditional therapy, the patients felt relief and expressed the hope the Chinese physicians would continue to conduct the free health camps in their localities in the future.

"I am very happy and thankful to the Chinese doctors, who visited here to examine and provide medicine to us free of cost," said Asha Kumal, 84, from Bodegaon of Lalitpur. Asha, suffering from knee and neck pain, said she felt better after receiving acupuncture therapy.

Over 1,200 patients – mostly women – visited the medical camps held in six different villages. The women patients had complained of feet problems especially planta pedis, low back and neck pain. The doctors, who diagnosed them, said these were the result of their hard farm work, as well as their lifestyle.

The Chinese doctors were the first to serve the villagers, many of whom had never consulted a physician in their entire lives before.

Prem Bahadur Maharjan, 68, had discomfort in his arms for the last two months. He received acupuncture treatment that ended his pain. "I found the Chinese doctors very friendly and kind," he said.

Many patients benefited fromacupuncture and cupping therapy. They were able to overcome chronic diseases pestering them for many years.

Nirmala Timalsim, 48, a teacher from Badal Gaun in Dhulikhel Municipality, suffered from a bunch of health problems such as psoatic strain, cervical spondylosis, insomnia, headaches and arthritis for the last 15 years. She had taken medicines and undergone exercise therapy, but of no avail. This time, however, she received acupuncture and cupping from Dr. Dai Xiaoqi and felt much better.

The Chinese doctors showed much patience and equanimity while organizing medical camps in difficult sites. On Dec. 15, they went to Pyutar, a remote village of Lalitpur.

"On the way, we experienced collapse four times, but our doctors still insisted on going to the intended village to treat the patients. They didn't have time even to have lunch or drink water. They treated 236 patients within two and a-half-hour with the help of local doctors," said Li Huipin, a journalist from Chengdu, who accompanied the medical team.

The Chinese doctors provided specialized medical services on orthopedics, diabetes, heart and skin disease, gastric illnesses, infections and emergency surgery, among others.

Kamal Badal, 50, was impressed by the visiting Chinese doctors. "Although they look young, they are very experienced and polite. This aroused my curiosity about China. I want to go to China and see what the country looks like," he said.

He Guangxian,deputydirectorofForeign Affairs Department of Sichuan Province, believed the medical camp would further enhance ties between China and Nepal.

This is not the first time Chinese doctors have served needy patients in Nepal.Immediately after the devastating 8.1 magnitude earthquake hit Nepal in 2015, a 58-member Chinese government medical team participated in first-aid work for 13 days. They treated 606 seriously-injured patients.

http://www.china.org.cn/world/2018-01/02/content_50183744.htm

:china::smitten:
 
Nepal accesses internet through China, ending India monopoly

KATHMANDU, Nepal (AP) — Nepal has opened an optical fiber link across the Himalayan mountains to China, ending years of dependency on India for internet access.

Information minister Mohan Bahadur Basnet inaugurated the link with China on Friday in a ceremony in the capital, Kathmandu.

The optical fiber line crosses into China from the Rasuwagadhi border point, northwest of Kathmandu.

Until Friday, landlocked Nepal’s only internet connections were through three access points in neighboring India. China is providing an additional route to the global internet.

Nepal is covered on three sides by India, which has an extensive influence on its economy and politics. China and Nepal share a border covered with high mountain peaks.



https://www.apnews.com/b324e1b2caad...internet-through-China,-ending-India-monopoly
 
Nepal hopes closer cooperation with China on hydropower projects
By Cui Can






Leela Mani Paudyal, Nepalese ambassador to China, delivers his opening remarks in a seminar on investment opportunities in hydropower projects in Nepal held in Beijing on March 23. [Photo by Cui Can/China.org.cn]
A seminar on investment opportunities in hydropower projects in Nepal was held in Beijing on March. 23, drawing about 100 experts, officials and enterprisers from China and Nepal.

Leela Mani Paudyal, Nepalese ambassador to China, said in his opening remarks that Nepal has attached great importance to relations with China, and is looking forward to more concrete agreements with Chinese companies that are interested in Nepal's hydropower sector.

He also pointed out the huge potential that lies in Nepal's hydropower sector, saying that the current 800 MW hydroelectric projects in Nepal tap only 1 percent of the total potential capacity. "Our four major river systems and over 6,000 other rivers are capable of producing huge quantities of power with different capacities."

Barsha Man Pun, minister of the Energy, Water Resources and Irrigation Ministry of Nepal, sent a message of support for both sides' aspirations to further develop hydropower projects in Nepal. He hoped that this seminar could shed light on China's financing and technical support for Nepal, especially in the field of hydroelectric generation and transmission.

In 2016, the Upper Marsyangdi-A Hydroelectic Project (50MW), the first China-invested power project in Nepal, developed by a China-Nepal joint venture company, started operations, giving a much-needed boost to the government's effort to ease its load shedding in winter.

In an effort to enable the Chinese entrepreneurs with a better understanding of Nepal's hydropower sector, Binod Prasad Acharya, minister (economic) of the Embassy of Nepal in China, elaborated on the prospects for investment in Nepal from the perspectives of the tax system, fiscal incentives, and major policies and regulations.

"As China's partner in the Belt and Road Initiative and the founding member of the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank, Nepal has deepened bilateral relations with China ever since. And I'm willing to see more Chinese companies invest in Nepal, benefiting the people of both sides in the future," Acharya said.
 
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