Telegraph Nepal
Nepal’s Prime Minister Baburam Bhattarai has become suddenly active to resolve the acute cooking gas crisis. He has opened diplomatic channels to ensure smooth flow of cooking gas in the country. Unfortunately his diplomatic channel begins and ends in New Delhi and that too around JNU quarters.
On Thursday Baburam directly telephoned his Indian counterpart Dr. Manmohan Singh and requested him to end current shortage of petroleum products in the country including cooking gas.
Beggar remains a beggar ever. As if Nepal doesn’t pay the cost of the cooking gas.
Thankfully during his entire conversation with his Indian counterpart, Baburam did not request Dr. Singh to ‘gulp’ Nepal because he is finding extremely difficult to run the country.
But rest assured, Bhattarai will appeal for the same one fine morning.
The other day talking to a select group of journalists, the JNU veteran Baburam had threatened that Nepal could be eventually merged either with India or China if the country failed to practice a foreign policy as per his suggestions.
However, Devendra Poudel, a Bhattarai yes man, claims that the PM did not make any such comments.
Baburam is being equated to Lendhup Dorje of Sikkim by his sharp critics after his merger remark.
“The Prime Minister has requested India to do the needful to help end current crisis of petroleum products,” Bhattarai’s personal aide Bishwadip Pandey told the media.
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