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Nepal not playing 'China card' against India: KP Oli

Oli has also said that he will visit China after his India trip as part of his government's policy to enhance cooperation with neighbours.

Kathmandu: Nepal is not playing the "China card" against India, Prime Minister KP Oli said on Thursday, on the eve of his visit to India during which many agreements are expected to be signed.

Addressing a press conference ahead of his maiden six-day India visit, Oli refuted allegations that he played the "China card" against India in the wake of the border blockade due to protests by Madhesis that caused severe shortage of essential goods, including petrol and cooking gas, in the country.

"It is not true that Nepal has played any card against India," he told reporters at his office.

"I won't play a card against any country," Prime Minister Oli said, adding in a lighter vein that, "I don't know how to play a card."

"There is no question of playing a card for one against the other. We want to develop friendly relations with both our great neighbours on the basis of mutual respect and benefit," 63-year-old Oli said.

Earlier some reports had said that Oli could visit China before India due to hiccups in India-Nepal ties over the Madhesi issue. Amid strain in India-Nepal ties, China was seen by analysts as getting closer to Nepal especially by providing essential goods to the crisis-hit nation.

Oli has also said that he will visit China within a month after his India trip as part of his government's policy to enhance cooperation with immediate neighbours.

"Our country will definitely benefit from my visit to India beginning from Friday and we won't lose from the visit," the Prime Minister said on Thursday.

During Oli's visit, the two countries are expected to sign a number of pacts, mostly related to the areas on which agreement has been reached in the past, sources close to the premier said.

Two MoUs one on the $1 billion line of credit that India has already committed to Nepal during Prime Minister Narendra Modi's visit and another on $1 billion that India has pledged during external affairs minister Sushma Swaraj's trip here for the country's post-earthquake reconstruction will be signed during Oli's visit, the sources said.

Oli, during the press interaction, said, "To gain friendship is also a gain and we will get much more than that (from the visit)."

He said he has no specific agenda for the talks as the visit is taking place in very complex and special circumstances.

"The main focus of the visit will be to create favourable situation and to build trust," Oli asserted.

( Source : PTI )
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