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India News Updated Jun 2, 2026

Nepal RSP Chief Lamichhane Meets BJP President Nitin Nabin in Delhi

Nepal's RSP chief Rabi Lamichhane met BJP president Nitin Nabin in Delhi to strengthen party-to-party ties. The visit focused on governance models, democratic practices, and public outreach strategies. Lamichhane is expected to meet PM Modi and External Affairs Minister Jaishankar. The visit comes amid uncertainty over Nepal PM Balendra Shah's proposed India visit.

Nepal ruling RSP chief Rabi Lamichhane meets BJP president Nitin Nabin in Delhi

New Delhi, June 2

Nepal's ruling Rastriya Swatantra Party President Rabi Lamichhane arrived at the Bharatiya Janata Party headquarters in New Delhi on Tuesday and was warmly welcomed by BJP chief Nitin Nabin.

Lamichhane's visit is focused on fostering party-to-party relations between the RSP and the BJP, while also facilitating discussions on organisational functioning, democratic practices, governance models and public outreach strategies.

On reaching the BJP headquarters, the Nepalese delegation led by Lamichhane was accorded a warm reception. A large number of members of the Nepalese community gathered at the venue and welcomed the visiting leaders with enthusiasm.

The visit is expected to serve as a platform for exchanging views on political organisation, democratic participation and people-centric governance.

It is also seen as an opportunity for both parties to explore avenues of cooperation and better understand each other's political and organisational frameworks.

Welcoming the delegation, the BJP expressed optimism that the interaction would contribute to productive dialogue and stronger engagement between the two political parties.

Lamichhane's visit assumes significance as it comes at a time when uncertainty continues to surround the proposed visit of Nepal Prime Minister Balendra Shah to India.

During his stay in New Delhi, Lamichhane is also expected to hold discussions with Prime Minister Narendra Modi, External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar and several other senior leaders, according to sources.

Several RSP leaders said that a visit by the chief of the ruling party to the neighbouring country should be viewed as a natural development.

In recent years, the BJP has been prioritising party-to-party relations besides state-to-state bilateral relations. In the past years, leaders of Nepal's political parties also visited New Delhi at the invitation of the BJP.

The current visit is also in line with the BJP's broader international outreach efforts.

Earlier, on May 26, BJP President Nitin Nabin interacted with Heads of Missions from 12 countries under the 'Know BJP' initiative, which seeks to strengthen engagement with members of the diplomatic community.

The programme forms part of the BJP's ongoing efforts to familiarise foreign representatives with the party's historical evolution, ideological foundations, governance approach and organisational structure.

According to party leaders, the initiative is one element of a wider series of engagements aimed at building greater understanding of the BJP among diplomats, political leaders and international stakeholders.

— IANS

Reader Comments

Sneha F

The 'Know BJP' initiative is quite interesting—engaging with diplomats from 12 countries to explain our governance model. It's not just about power politics but soft power outreach. If this helps foster better ties with Nepal, it's a win-win.

Ravi K

But the elephant in the room is the uncertainty around PM Shah's visit. Why is this RSP chief meeting with everyone except his counterpart in Nepal? This seems like a political game to bypass the PM at home. Just saying, bro—diplomacy is more complex than it looks.

Swati Y

Har har Mahadev! 🇳🇵 Nepal and India need to strengthen ties beyond just formal meetings. People-to-people contact is what matters. I hope this visit leads to tangible results for both countries—trade, water resources, border management. Aur kya?

Rohan X

'Trouble in paradise'? Seems like Nepal's internal politics is a mess, and everyone is trying to get a hearing in Delhi. Meanwhile, we forget that China is also courting Nepal. This needs careful handling—we don't want another border dispute like with Chi****.

Deepika L

It's good that BJP is doing party-to-party diplomacy. Our neighbors see India as a democracy worth emulating. But I hope the opposition doesn't politicize this visit. Sabka saath, sabka vikas—let's keep it that way with Nepal too. 😊

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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