We use Google Cloud Translation Services. Google requires we provide the following disclaimer relating to use of this service:
This service may contain translations powered by Google. Google disclaims all warranties related to the translations, expressed or implied, including any warranties of accuracy, reliability, and any implied warranties of merchantability, fitness for a particular purpose, and noninfringement.
The parliamentarians have questioned the Home Minister regarding the occupation of Nepal's land by Indian citizens. In Monday's meeting of the State Order and Good Governance Committee under the House of Representatives, Congress MP Dilendra Prasad Badu and UML MP Raghuji Pant questioned Home Minister Ramesh Akhtar about the occupation of Nepali land by Indians in Kanchanpur.
About 900 bigha of forest area of Shuklaphanta National Park in Kanchanpur has been reported in Kantipur and other media, what is the government doing about it? Pant has asked that.
Parliamentarian Pant questioned what the government is doing from the local administration and what is the reality of the Indian occupying the land of Nepal in the area which is also the home minister's constituency.
'In Kanchanpu, more than 900 bighas of land are being occupied by Indians in the media including Kantipur Dainik . What is the government doing about what Indians are doing? As the home minister's constituency is also there and there is no boundary dispute, let the attention of the home minister be drawn to the matter,' Pant said, 'step should be taken as soon as possible and an answer should be received from the home minister.'
MP Pant said that Nepal's land should be used by its neighbors to end. "Our land should not be consumed by our neighbors, our land should be enjoyed by us."
Congress MP Dilendra Prasad Badu said that the land on Nepal's map, but India's occupation is not right. "Bhumi is on our map, but it is heavy on our lifestyles." It should be looked at seriously,' Badu said .
Indian citizens were farming in about 900 bigha forest area of Shuklaphanta National Park. It has been revealed that Indian citizens have been farming for a long time in the southern part of the park, which is connected to Gorakh Dibi in Pilibhit district of Uttar Pradesh, India.
