India Banks On Lord Rama To ‘Resurrect’ Ties With Nepal; Looks To Outwit China With ‘Ramayana Corridor’
Now India seeks to outwit China through Ramayana Corridor, a train journey crisscrossing through holy sites in both countries mentioned in the ancient Hindu Epic. Prime Minister of Nepal Pushpa Kamal Dahal ‘Prachanda’ is on his first foreign visit to India after taking office in December 2022. The Prime Minister is expected to seek better recruitment terms for Gorkha soldiers getting a raw deal joining the Indian Army. But the issue was neither raised by the Nepali Prime Minister nor by Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi. Indian Foreign Secretary Vinay Mohan Kwatra, in a press conference after the joint statement issued by the Prime Minister of the two countries, categorically denied the issue coming up for discussion. This indicates that the impasse over recruiting Nepali Gorkha soldiers will continue. The EurAsian Times had earlier reported that the centuries-old link between the two countries is now under duress because of the new recruitment scheme launched by the Indian Army in 2022. Under the new Agnipath scheme (Path of Fire), the Indian Government has drastically altered the recruitment procedure to cut down the burgeoning pension bill and make the force younger and leaner. Under the new scheme, 75 percent of the recruits will retire after four years of service with a severance package but without pension benefits. Only 25 percent will be retained for longer service durations to get a pension. The Nepali government had conveyed their misgivings about the new scheme to their Indian counterparts. It implored that the recruitment to the Indian Army should continue as per the tripartite treaty of 1947 between the UK, India, and Nepal. The tripartite treaty of 1947 doesn’t recognize short-term services like Agnipath, and there is also a social cost for those returning to the country after just four years of service in the Indian Army. Annually 1300 Gorkha soldiers from Nepal join the Indian Army. There are seven Gorkha regiments in the Indian Army, with 40 battalions and a total of 40,000 soldiers, but only one-fourth of them are of Nepalese origin. There are 126,000 Gorkha pensioners of the Indian Army in Nepal. The Indian Army’s hands are also tied in the matter as it cannot have separate recruitment policies for different groups, officials explained.Alternative To Suez Canal, Russia & Iran With Indian Goodwill Could ‘Break The Isolation’ With INSTC
Lord Rama Comes To Rescue The Failing Ties Between India And Nepal
Religious ties have been a resilient foundation for ties between the two South Asian countries. The two countries share the spiritual heritage of Hinduism. Lord Rama is revered in both countries. Now India will be creating a trans-country railway network that underscores the two countries’ shared heritage in a bid to outwit China.- Ritu Sharma has been a journalist for over a decade, writing on defense, foreign affairs, and nuclear technology.
- She can be reached at ritu.sharma (at) mail.com