Kathmandu:Nepal Prime Minister K P Sharma Oli has committed three 'mistakes' with his recent 'undiplomatic' and 'irritating' anti-India statements, a senior leader of the ruling communist party has said, amidst mounting pressure on the embattled leader who is facing calls for resignation.
Last month, prime minister Oli alleged that India was conspiring with his political rivals to throw him out of power. His remark came over a week after Nepal approved a bill to redraw the country's map demarcating the Lipulekh mountain pass, Kalapani and Limpiyadhura the area at the centre of the dispute between India and Nepal under its territory.
The embattled prime minister stoked another controversy this month by claiming that the 'real' Ayodhya lies not in India but Nepal and that Lord Ram was born in Thori in southern Nepal.
Reacting to Oli's remarks, Spokesperson of Communist Party of Nepal (CPN) and member of the powerful Central Secretariat Narayankaji Shrestha described the prime minister's statements as undiplomatic.
"Prime Minister KP Sharma Oli has committed a blunder by making irritating remarks against India, at a time when there is a need for resolving the border issue through dialogue with the southern neighbour," he said.
"It was a mistake on the part of Prime Minister Oli to make irritating remarks by mentioning India's national symbol while claiming the disputed lands of Kalapani and Lipulekh," the spokesperson said.
"Prime minister Oli has committed three blunders in dealing with India, though the claim made by the government on Kalapani and other territories by issuing a new map was commendable," he said.
"The first mistake was speaking about India's symbol Satyamev Jayate in an irritant manner, the second mistake is to blame India for hatching conspiracy to topple his government, which is baseless, and thirdly he committed a mistake by claiming that Ayodhya, the birthplace of Lord Ram lies near Birgunj of Nepal," Shrestha said.
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The India-Nepal bilateral ties came under strain after Defence Minister Rajnath Singh inaugurated an 80-km-long strategically crucial road connecting the Lipulekh pass with Dharchula in Uttarakhand on May 8.