Kathmandu: Rift has resurfaced in Nepal's ruling Communist Party following a meeting between Prime Minister K P Sharma Oli and his opponent Pushpa Kamal Dahal 'Prachanda', with the premier hinting at splitting the ruling party, a senior party leader said on Sunday.
Oli and Prachanda resolved their differences in September by agreeing to a power-sharing deal, ending the months-long dispute in the party.
The party's internal dispute which had surfaced after the dissident group leaders, including Prachanda and senior leader of the party Madhav Kumar Nepal, demanded Oli's resignation from both as the party's chairman and as Nepal's prime minister after he accused the dissident leaders of conspiring against him to topple his government.
Oli, who met the party's executive chairman Prachanda, on Saturday hinted towards splitting the party, a senior leader of the party said.
Prachanda and Oli held the meeting after a gap of nearly two weeks, in which the prime minister told Prachanda that if we cannot walk together, let's walk on our own. Oli also turned down Prachanda's request to convening party's Central Secretariat meeting to resolve the ongoing dispute.
The two leaders are at loggerheads over several issues, including the controversy that surfaced in the party following the recent meeting between Research and Analysis Wing (R&AW) chief Samant Kumar Goel, and the Prime Minister, party sources said.
Oli has come under fire from the country's political leaders, including from the ruling Communist Party, for breaching diplomatic norms over his meeting with Goel on October 21.
Read more:Nepal at the crossroads
Meanwhile, General Secretary of the ruling Communist Party of Nepal (CPN) Bishnu Poudel said on Sunday that his party is currently facing a serious existential crisis.