BEIJING, June 16 (Reuters) - Nepalese Foreign Minister Shisir Khanal met China's top diplomat Wang Yi on Monday (June 15), his first trip to the neighbouring superpower since his party swept to election victory in March, and days after visiting Beijing's regional rival India.
The ousting of a Communist Party-led coalition government in Beijing's backyard presents a conundrum to Chinese diplomats, who have been working to shore up ties with neighbouring nations while reasserting claims in the East and South China Seas, analysts say.
"China has always placed Nepal at the forefront of its 'neighbourhood diplomacy'," said Wang, according to a foreign ministry readout released late on Monday, and "will support Nepal in safeguarding its national sovereignty and territorial integrity."
Analysts said Nepal's ties to South Asian power India gave the country of some 30 million people a degree of leverage over China, putting Beijing in the unfamiliar position of having to prove its worth.
While Kathmandu and Delhi have feuded over parts of their 1,751-km border for decades, Khanal told his hosts in Delhi earlier this month that the new government in Nepal was "free from the political baggage from the past," and ready to improve relations with India.
Nepal's ties with China have been bogged down due to inaction over project delivery for infrastructure earmarked as part of Chinese leader Xi Jinping's flagship "Belt and Road" infrastructure initiative, which Nepal joined in 2017, mostly due to financing disagreements.
Wang reiterated China's commitment to building up Nepal's infrastructure, highlighting cooperation in power generation, highways, ports and aviation.
China, the world's largest bilateral creditor, has lent Nepal around US$310 million, according to World Bank data, while India has extended US$280 billion in loans. Chinese firms have invested US$1.12 billion in the country's energy and real estate sectors, data from the American Enterprise Institute think tank shows.
The Export-Import Bank of China agreed a US$216 million loan in 2016 to finance the construction of Pokhara International Airport, but in December an anti-graft body in Nepal charged 55 officials and a Chinese contractor with inflating the cost of the project from an original estimate of US$170 to US$244 million.
Khanal's Rastriya Swatantra Party campaigned on a promise to crack down on corruption.
Eric Olander, co-founder of the China-Global South Project, a media and research organisation, said Beijing may have been unpleasantly surprised by the Nepalese election outcome.
"Beijing doesn't like change that directly impacts them," he said. "Change that is potentially hostile or challenges their interest is what gets their attention.
"My guess is they didn't see this coming in Nepal and they don't like it when popular movements overthrow incumbent governments." - Reuters
