Kathmandu:Nepal Prime Minister KP Sharma Oli on Monday said that the ongoing border disputes with India will be resolved through diplomatic talks.
Although Nepal and India held ministerial-level talks in New Delhi last month, the two sides could not hammer out the differences after the Himalayan nation unveiled a new map in May 2020.
He made the remarks at a seminar titled, ‘Nepal's International Border Security and Areas of Coordination among Border Management related Agencies', organised by the Nepal Army.
"To consolidate the Nepal-India ties cordially, we had to print the map and talk to India. Our relations could turn cordial by only returning our territory through dialogue. Border disputes are prevailing in Susta and Kanchanpur," he said.
Nepal and India had boundary rows since long in the Susta and Kalapani area and during the Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi's visit to Nepal in 2014, both sides had delegated to resolve the dispute at Foreign Secretaries levels but they could not meet.
In November 2019, New Delhi came up with a new political map incorporating Kalapani in its territory.
Nepal objected to the Indian move and offered talks at a diplomatic level but India suggested face-to-face talks only once the Covid crisis was over.
Read:|Nepal PM Oli calls on public to gear up for polls
But in May 2020 after India opened up a new 80 km link road in Uttarakhand via Lipu Lekh that Nepal claims its own, the Himalayan nation once again objected the move and offered talks.
After New Delhi failed to respond to the repeated calls, Nepal on May 20, 2020, unveiled the new political map of the country incorporating the disputed territory.