Discussions with Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath and Uttarakhand Chief Minister Pushkarsinh Dhami on various issues ranging from increasing 'connectivity' to bringing in Indian tourists
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Far West Chief Minister Kamal Bahadur Shah, who is visiting India, met Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath and Uttarakhand Chief Minister Pushkar Singh Dhami. The far western border connects with both those states of India.
With the aim of developing relations at the state level, Shah met with the Chief Ministers of both the border states. Chief Minister Shah said that there was a discussion with both the leaders about the common challenges and opportunities seen in the border area. Shah, who met with Yogi in Lucknow on Monday, discussed issues ranging from road improvement in the border areas, control over drug trade and plans to bring tourists from Uttar Pradesh to the far west.
'He has had a conversation on many subjects . We have drawn his attention to the fact that the Katipaya roads within the Indian border connecting Nepal are bad and there is difficulty in movement,' he said.
If the two roads connected with Uttar Pradesh are good, he said, tourism in the Far West will benefit from it. He said that they have proposed to increase road connectivity between Uttar Pradesh and Sudurpaschim. "There has been a positive response from Yogiji," he said.
Chief Minister Yogi interpreted the relationship between the two countries as 'two bodies and one soul' and said that India will always play a positive role in the development of Nepal. Shah met his counterpart Yogi alone for half an hour. "I found his goodwill towards Nepal and the Nepali people very good," Shah said, "He was of the opinion that people-to-people relations should be further developed and strengthened."
The team led by Chief Minister Shah has also inspected Chief Minister Yogi's 'Command Desk' and Uttar Pradesh Legislative Assembly. The team led by Shah has taken information about the progress of the development plan across the province, complaints from the people and other matters from the Chief Minister's "Command Desk" and the fact that the Assembly has been made completely "paperless". Under the leadership of Chief Minister Shah, a team of 10 people representing all parties of the state assembly is visiting India.
The Chief Minister's team reached Delhi on Baisakh 16 via Dhangadhi-Kathmandu on the official invitation of the Ministry of External Affairs of India. It is the first time that a Chief Minister has made an official visit to India at the invitation of the Government of India since the practice of the formation of Nepal Province in 2074. The team spent two days in Delhi and met with the Minister of State for External Affairs Kirtivardhan Singh and had an opportunity to interact at the Vivekananda Foundation. Chief Minister Shah's team also met the officials of the Indian government company NHPC, which is working on West Seti and Seti River 6 hydropower projects in the far west.
The Nepali team that reached Dehradun from Delhi met Uttarakhand Chief Minister Pushkar Singh Dhami on Saturday. The two leaders had a conversation about protecting the religious, cultural and social equality and relations between the citizens of the two provinces of Nepal and India. Shah said that the chief minister of Uttarakhand has been requested to speed up the work of the bridge under construction in Darchula, to take the initiative to construct bridges at Zhulaghat in Baitadi and Parasuram in Dadeldhura.
"We have tried to bring the citizens of the two provinces of India, which are bordering with us, to Nepal as tourists, to increase connectivity and to increase the development of relations at the provincial level," Shah said. This year, after receiving an invitation from there, the tour took place. On the way, the team reached Lucknow and Dehradun after a long journey through Kathmandu and Delhi, and on their way back, they are coming to Dhangadhi by road from Lucknow on Tuesday. The border area of Dhangadhi from Lucknow is 5 hours away by road from Gauriphanta. Naresh Shahi, a member of the State Assembly of the United Samajwadi Party, who is part of the
tour team, said that the visit, meeting and interaction in Delhi, Dehradun and Lucknow were good. He said that talks were held in the direction of increasing mutual relations and identifying the dual problems of the border region and solving them. He mentioned that since a lot of workers go to India for employment from the Far West, they have been able to talk about their safety, wages and other issues at all levels.
