June 10, 2007
Nepal Gives Month's Notice
to Indian Squatters
Kathmandu
The Nepali authorities have given encroaching Indian squatters in
the southern Terai plains a month's time to quit or face forcible
ouster, Nepal's state media said Sunday.
A group of Indians have built houses and cowsheds in two villages in
Sunsari district in southern Nepal, the state-owned Gorkhapatra
daily reported earlier this month.
At least seven houses have been built in Amaduba and Sripur villages
with the encroachers also beginning to grow jute and banana in the
surrounding areas, the report said.
They were also said to be removing the pillars erected to demarcate
the border between Nepal and India.
Following the report, an official team went to the area and found
that Nepali territory was being encroached upon.
"We have given them one month to leave," Nagendra Bahadur Thapa,
Armed Police Force chief in the bordering area, told the state-run
Rising Nepal daily.
"The Indians have agreed to leave."
The chief administrative officer of the district, Prem Narayan
Sharma, told the state media that his office will also coordinate
with the Indian border area authorities.
"If the Indians do not leave, they will be evicted," he said.
The 1,800-km open border that Nepal shares with its southern
neighbour India has often been a contentious issue.
With the rivers, which often demarcate the boundary between the two
countries, changing their courses, a joint team is currently
revising the border.
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