Bhutan,
a tiny landlocked nation of around 740,000 people tucked in at the eastern end
of the Himalayas, at first sight seems a strange choice of destination, rather
as if a new Australian PM had chosen Kiribati or Tuvalu for a first visit.
Look
a little closer and there are good reasons Modi made Thimphu the first capital
to pay his respects as Indian leader. The country shares a border with both
India and China and it is Beijing which has been making the diplomatic headway
there in recent times.
While
India has been preoccupied with internal problems, China has stolen several
diplomatic marches on the country’s doorstep, establishing its presence in Sri
Lanka, Bangladesh and Pakistan. Only this year it overtook India as the biggest
foreign investor in Nepal.
While
Bhutan has so far resisted Beijing’s attempts to cosy up – the countries have a
disputed border with no resolution in sight – its normally close relations with
New Delhi received a setback when the previous Government suspended the supply
of subsidised kerosene and liquid petroleum gas to the kingdom.
Modi’s
aim was to get relations back on track. He promised to speed work on three
hydro-electric projects, which will benefit both countries, double the number
of scholarships for Bhutanese students in India and create an e-library
containing more than two million books and periodicals.
All
this is aimed at strengthening Indo-Bhutan ties and fortifying Thimphu’s
resolve when its border talks resume with China next month. The nightmare
scenario for New Delhi would be Bhutan being bullied into concessions,
especially on its western borders, which would put more pressure on the Siliguri
Corridor, or Chicken’s Neck, a narrow sliver of territory that is the only
connection with India’s seven north-eastern states, one of which, Arunachal
Pradesh, is claimed by Beijing as ‘Southern Tibet’.
If
mending fences was the Indian Prime Minister’s principle aim, his visit appears
to have been an unqualified success. At a state banquet, Bhutan’s Prime
Minister, Lyonchen Tshering Tobgay, praised his counterpart and called for
India to be given a permanent seat on the United Nations Security Council.
China’s
reaction to the visit was muted with the state-run Xinhua news agency quoting Foreign
Ministry spokesperson Hua Chunying as saying China was glad to see its
neighbours developing friendly relations with each other.
However,
it is clear that China’s diplomatic offensive in South Asia has received a
small but significant setback.
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