A new phase in India-Nepal relations
Study Note: A New Phase in India-Nepal Relations
1. At a Glance
- India-Nepal relations are governed by the 1950 Treaty of Peace and Friendship, making Nepal India's closest Himalayan neighbour with unique people-to-people, trade, and security linkages. [S1]
- The territorial dispute over Kalapani, Lipulekh, and Limpiyadhura — a tri-junction area bordering India, Nepal, and Tibet (China) — has been the single most contentious bilateral irritant since Nepal's new political map of 2020. [S2]
- Why UPSC cares: Touches GS-II (bilateral relations, neighbourhood policy), GS-I (political geography), and Mains essays on India's neighbourhood-first doctrine.
- In mid-2026, a rare conciliatory signal from Nepal's PM Balendra Shah ("Balen") marks a potential inflection point: he acknowledged the dispute may not be entirely one-sided, opening space for diplomatic resolution. [S1]
2. Why in the News
- 31 May 2026: Nepal PM Balendra Shah ("Balen") intervened briefly in a parliamentary debate on the Kalapani-Lipulekh-Limpiyadhura boundary dispute, stating that Nepal may itself be occupying some territory claimed by India, and calling for both sides to examine facts objectively. [S1]
- His remarks triggered protests inside and outside Nepal's Parliament but also signalled a departure from the maximalist posture of previous administrations. [S1]
- India's resumption of Kailash Mansarovar Yatra (KMY) via Lipulekh Pass (2026): India and China agreed to resume the KMY; India rejected Nepal's objection, calling its territorial claim an "unilateral artificial enlargement" that New Delhi finds "untenable." [S3, S4]
- Nepal issued a diplomatic note objecting to India-China trade through the Lipulekh Pass; India responded positively, with both sides agreeing to address the issue through dialogue. [S1]
- Nepal's Foreign Minister Khanal signalled openness to resolving disputes through existing bilateral mechanisms, calling for "an open heart, rational mind and mutual respect." [S2]
3. Background & Evolution
| Year | Event |
|---|---|
| 1816 | Sugauli Treaty (India-Nepal-British) — defines broad boundary; Mahakali River as western boundary |
| 1950 | Treaty of Peace and Friendship — open border, free movement of people |
| 1962 | After Sino-Indian War, India establishes military presence at Kalapani (near Lipulekh Pass) |
| 1997 | Joint Technical Level Boundary Committee set up; meetings stall repeatedly |
| 2015 | India-China agreement on Lipulekh Pass for trade and pilgrimage routes |
| May 2020 | India inaugurates Dharchula–Lipulekh road (80 km link road in Uttarakhand); Nepal protests strongly |
| May 2020 | Nepal publishes a new political map incorporating Kalapani, Lipulekh, Limpiyadhura (≈335 sq km) |
| June 2020 | Nepal Parliament unanimously passes Second Constitutional Amendment to enshrine the new map |
| 2022 | Nepal Foreign Secretary-level talks; no breakthrough on boundary |
| 2025 | India-China agree to resume KMY via Lipulekh; Nepal raises diplomatic objection |
| May 2026 | India rejects Nepal's claim; KMY 2026 launched via Lipulekh Pass [S3, S4] |
| 31 May 2026 | Nepal PM Balen Shah's conciliatory parliamentary statement [S1] |
| June 2026 | Nepal FM signals dialogue-first approach [S2] |
4. Core Static Facts
The Disputed Territory - Kalapani: ~35 sq km at the source of Kali/Mahakali River; India administers as part of Pithoragarh district, Uttarakhand - Lipulekh Pass: Mountain pass (~5,200 m) on India-China border; established route for Kailash Mansarovar Yatra and bilateral trade - Limpiyadhura: Upstream source of Mahakali River; Nepal claims boundary follows this tributary
Legal/Treaty Basis of Dispute - Sugauli Treaty (1816): Uses "Kali River" as western boundary — both sides dispute which tributary is the "true" Kali - Nepal's position: Limpiyadhura is the source of Kali → boundary runs further west → includes Lipulekh and Kalapani - India's position: Lipulekh-Kalapani have been administered by India; Nepal's 2020 map is an "enlargement" without historical basis
Key Bilateral Frameworks - 1950 Treaty of Peace and Friendship — open border, reciprocal rights - Eminent Persons' Group (EPG) — set up 2016 to review the 1950 Treaty; report submitted to Nepal PM 2018, not officially received by India - Joint Technical Level Boundary Committee (JTLBC) — established 1997; operational mechanism for boundary demarcation - Foreign Secretary-level talks — the primary diplomatic channel for border issues
Kailash Mansarovar Yatra (KMY) - Organised by Ministry of External Affairs, India - Two routes: (1) via Lipulekh Pass, Uttarakhand; (2) via Nathu La, Sikkim (used until 2020) - Suspended 2020–2024 due to COVID/China restrictions; resumed 2025–26 [S3, S4] - Nepal objects to the Lipulekh route as passing through disputed territory
Nepal's New Map (2020) - Passed via Second Amendment to Nepal's Constitution - Claims ≈335 sq km of Indian-administered territory - India's official response: "Artificial, unilateral" act with no historical basis [S3]
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Geopolitical / Strategic
- China factor: Lipulekh is a key India-China trade/pilgrimage point; Nepal objecting to India-China agreements over territory Nepal claims gives China leverage to play spoiler. [S3]
- India's Neighbourhood First Policy faces its sharpest test with Nepal — a landlocked neighbour that depends on India for ~65% of trade but has growing Chinese economic footprint.
- Nepal PM Balen Shah's conciliatory tone aligns with a broader recalibration: the previous KP Sharma Oli government institutionalised the anti-India map claim; Balen is from a non-traditional political background (independent/RVP), less beholden to that narrative. [S1]
- Strategic depth: Kalapani is at the tri-junction of India, Nepal, and Tibet; Indian military presence there dates to 1962 and is seen as essential for Himalayan border security.
Legal / Constitutional
- Nepal's Second Constitutional Amendment (2020) made the new map a matter of constitutional identity — any future compromise politically costly for Kathmandu. [S2]
- India has NOT amended its own maps; continues to show Kalapani in Uttarakhand.
- Sugauli Treaty interpretation is the core legal dispute — no binding third-party arbitration mechanism exists.
Economic
- Nepal's India-China trade via Lipulekh: Nepal objected to India-China goods traffic through the pass, arguing it bypasses Nepali territory. India's positive diplomatic response suggests room for a customs/transit arrangement. [S1]
- Remittances and open border: An estimated 3–4 million Nepali nationals work in India; the 1950 Treaty's open-border and employment rights provisions dwarf the Kalapani dispute economically.
- Indian development assistance: Lines of Credit for hydropower, railways, cross-border transmission lines — all subject to political weather in Kathmandu.
Historical
- The 1962 Sino-Indian War legacy: India's forward posture at Kalapani was a direct response to Chinese aggression; Nepal's claim overlaps with this strategic logic.
- Nepal's oscillation between "equidistance" and India-leaning governments is a structural pattern since the 1990 multiparty democracy; Balen Shah's independent political identity may break this pendulum pattern. [S1]
Administrative
- Indian side: MEA handles boundary talks; Ministry of Road Transport & Highways built the contested Dharchula-Lipulekh road; KMY administered by MEA. [S3, S4]
- Nepal side: Foreign Ministry leads diplomacy; Parliament constitutionally bound by 2020 map amendment — PM Balen's remarks exposed this institutional constraint. [S1]
6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)
- January 2025: India and China agree to resume Kailash Mansarovar Yatra; MEA Secretary confirms agreement. [S5]
- May 2026: India officially rejects Nepal's objection to KMY 2026 via Lipulekh, calling the territorial claim "untenable" and an "unilateral artificial enlargement." [S3]
- May 2026: MEA announces launch of Kailash Mansarovar Yatra 2026. [S4]
- 31 May 2026: Nepal PM Balendra Shah ("Balen") makes rare conciliatory statement in Parliament, acknowledging Nepal may also occupy territory claimed by India; calls for mutual objective examination and amicable resolution. [S1]
- May–June 2026: Nepal's diplomatic note on Lipulekh trade route receives positive response from India; both sides agree to dialogue. [S1]
- June 2026: Nepal Foreign Minister Khanal states: "Let us build an alliance not constrained by the past" — signals a tonal shift in Kathmandu. [S2]
- June 2026: Nepal's Foreign Ministry reiterates commitment to resolving boundary via diplomatic channels, following India's rejection of Nepal's Kalapani claim. [S1]
7. Prelims Hooks
- The India-Nepal boundary dispute centres on Kalapani, Lipulekh, and Limpiyadhura — areas at the trijunction of India, Nepal, and Tibet (China). [S1]
- Nepal released a new political map incorporating these territories in May 2020, following India's inauguration of the Dharchula-Lipulekh road. [S2]
- Nepal's new map was constitutionally entrenched via the Second Amendment to Nepal's Constitution, passed by Parliament in June 2020. [S2]
- India administers Kalapani as part of Pithoragarh district, Uttarakhand. [S3]
- The Sugauli Treaty of 1816 established the Kali (Mahakali) River as the western boundary between Nepal and British India. [S2]
- The Kailash Mansarovar Yatra is organised by India's Ministry of External Affairs; the Lipulekh Pass route passes through the disputed area. [S4]
- KMY was suspended from 2020–2024 (COVID + China border closure); agreed to be resumed by India and China in January 2025. [S5]
- India described Nepal's 2020 territorial claim as an "unilateral artificial enlargement" that is "untenable" — MEA's official position. [S3]
- The Eminent Persons' Group (EPG), set up in 2016 to review the 1950 Treaty of Peace and Friendship, submitted its report in 2018; India has not formally received/acted on it.
- Nepal PM Balendra Shah ("Balen") is an independent politician elected from Kathmandu; he does not belong to the traditional CPN-UML or NC parties that institutionalised the 2020 map claim. [S1]
- The Joint Technical Level Boundary Committee (JTLBC), established in 1997, is the standing mechanism for India-Nepal boundary demarcation.
- India and Nepal share an open border under the 1950 Treaty, allowing free movement of people and reciprocal employment rights.
- Nepal's objection to India-China trade via Lipulekh is based on the claim that the pass lies within Nepali sovereign territory — a position India officially rejects. [S1, S3]
- Nepal PM Balen's parliamentary statement on 31 May 2026 was described as a "few minutes" intervention — unusual for brevity and for its conciliatory tone. [S1]
8. Mains Relevance
GS Paper: Primarily GS-II (International Relations — India and its Neighbourhood)
Specific Syllabus Headings: - "India and its neighbourhood — relations with immediate neighbours" - "Effect of policies and politics of developed and developing countries on India's interests, Indian diaspora" - "Bilateral, regional and global groupings and agreements involving India"
Plausible Mains Questions:
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"Nepal's constitutionalisation of its territorial claims in 2020 has foreclosed diplomatic space for India-Nepal boundary resolution." Critically examine, in light of recent developments in 2026. (GS-II, 15 marks)
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"The China factor complicates India's Neighbourhood First policy in Nepal more than any other variable." Analyse with reference to the Kalapani-Lipulekh-Limpiyadhura dispute. (GS-II, 15 marks)
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"A new political leadership in Kathmandu has offered the first credible opening for a rational settlement of the India-Nepal boundary dispute. How should India respond?" (GS-II, 10 marks)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Connection |
|---|---|
| 1950 Treaty of Peace and Friendship (India-Nepal) | Legal foundation of entire bilateral relationship; Eminent Persons' Group reviewed it |
| India's Neighbourhood First Policy | Nepal is the flagship test case; policy tensions manifest directly in this dispute |
| Kailash Mansarovar Yatra | The pilgrimage route is the live flashpoint triggering current diplomatic friction |
| India-China border management (Uttarakhand sector) | Lipulekh Pass is an India-China trade/pilgrimage point; Nepal's claim intertwines with India-China dynamics |
| Hydropower cooperation in Nepal | India's largest developmental stake in Nepal; political disruptions in Kathmandu impact hydropower projects |
| SAARC and BIMSTEC | Nepal's role in South Asian multilateral architecture; India's pivot from SAARC to BIMSTEC affects Nepal |
| China's Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) and Nepal | Nepal signed BRI framework agreement (2017); BRI presence in Nepal is a direct strategic counter to Indian influence |
| India-Bhutan relations | Contrasting model of a settled bilateral with a resolved boundary framework — useful comparison with Nepal |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
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Confusing Lipulekh with Nathu La: Both are India-China trade/pilgrimage routes, but Nathu La is in Sikkim (no Nepal dispute), while Lipulekh is in Uttarakhand (core of the Nepal dispute). Do not mix them.
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Wrong year for Nepal's new map: The map was released in May 2020, not 2019 (when India published its own political map showing the Jammu & Kashmir reorganisation). The J&K map triggered Nepal's attention to the issue but the Nepali map came after India's Dharchula-Lipulekh road inauguration in May 2020.
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Attributing the road to a different ministry: The Dharchula-Lipulekh road (80 km) was built by the Border Roads Organisation (BRO) under the Ministry of Defence / Ministry of Road Transport; the KMY is organised by MEA — these are different ministries.
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Assuming Nepal's PM Balen = CPN party: Balen Shah is not from the major left or centrist parties (CPN-UML, CPN-Maoist Centre, Nepali Congress); he was an independent candidate who won the Kathmandu mayoral election before becoming PM — this non-traditional background explains his willingness to deviate from the entrenched 2020 map position.
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Misreading India's response as acceptance of dialogue on territory: India accepted dialogue on the Lipulekh trade route issue but simultaneously and firmly rejected Nepal's territorial claim over Lipulekh/Kalapani in the context of KMY 2026. These are two distinct Indian positions — do not conflate.
11. Sources
- [S1] "A new phase in India-Nepal relations" — The Hindu, 10 June 2026 (Atul K. Thakur) — https://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/2026-06-10/th_international/articleG6AG3H1IN-14895114.ece — (Tier 4 — article excerpt provided as primary source)
- [S2] "Let us build alliance not constrained by past: Nepal minister on India ties" — Business Standard, 7 June 2026 — https://www.business-standard.com/external-affairs-defence-security/news/let-us-build-alliance-not-constrained-by-past-nepal-minister-on-india-ties-126060700360_1.html — (Tier 4)
- [S3] "Kailash Mansarovar Yatra: India rejects Nepal's claim over Lipulekh Pass" — Business Standard, 3 May 2026 — https://www.business-standard.com/external-affairs-defence-security/news/kailash-mansarovar-yatra-india-rejects-nepal-s-claim-over-lipulekh-pass-126050300795_1.html — (Tier 4)
- [S4] "Launching of Kailash Manasarovar Yatra 2026" — Ministry of External Affairs, Government of India — https://www.mea.gov.in/press-releases.htm?dtl%2F41090%2FLaunching_of_Kailash_Manasarovar_Yatra_2026= — (Tier 1)
- [S5] "India, China agree to resume Kailash Mansarovar Yatra in 2025: MEA's Secy" — Business Standard, 27 January 2025 — https://www.business-standard.com/external-affairs-defence-security/news/india-china-agree-to-resume-kailash-mansarovar-yatra-in-2025-mea-s-secy-125012701266_1.html — (Tier 4)
Note: The Hindu article (S1) was paywalled; facts were drawn from the full excerpt provided. MEA press release (S4) is a Tier 1 primary source confirming KMY 2026 launch.