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Kathmandu: India will help Nepal construct a rail link between capital Kathmandu and Raxaul in Bihar for smoother movement of passengers and cargo to the landlocked Himalayan nation, which neighbouring China is also trying to woo with a similar plan.
An agreement to study the feasibility of a rail line linking the two countries was signed by Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his Nepal counterpart KP Sharma Oli on Friday during a meeting on the sidelines of the BIMSTEC Summit.
The Konkan Railway Corporation Ltd will conduct a preliminary engineering and traffic survey for the rail line, the Indian embassy in Nepal said in a statement.
The planned 130km (80.78 mile) line from Raxaul in eastern Bihar to Kathmandu, once built, will just be the second rail track in the mountainous nation. Nepal’s only railway link is a 35km stretch in its southern plains.
Construction of the rail line and its funding will be finalised after the Konkan Railway submits its findings, officials said.
The bulk of Nepal’s overland foreign trade is routed through Raxaul and accounts for nearly two-thirds of all trade in the landlocked nation. Imports by roadways are often delayed and expensive as cargo is carried in diesel-guzzling trucks.
“The Raxaul-Kathmandu rail line is expected to expand connectivity by enhancing people-to-people linkages between the two countries and promoting economic growth and development,” the Indian embassy statement said.
Nepal, wedged between China and India, is seeking to lessen its heavy dependence on New Delhi for trade and the supply of essential goods such as fuel, as it tries to improve connectivity with China.
China has already conducted a pre-feasibility study for a 70km link connecting Gyiron in Tibet with Kathmandu, making it one of the most ambitious infrastructure projects in the rugged Himalayan mountains.
Political analysts say India’s plan to build the rail link in Nepal comes as New Delhi jostles with Beijing to wield greater influence over smaller neighbours.
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