RIVERS RUN THROUGH IT
Two uncomfortable border problems have come up for discussion between India and Nepal: one in Nepal's southeastern tip in the Tarai plains and the other diagonally across, in the Himalayan fastness of northwest Nepal. Both are manifestations of unfinished business in border demarcation between the two countries, of domestic political sensitivities and compulsions that only a territorial issue can generate.
At the Nepal-India Joint Boundary Technical Committee in 1988, the Nepali side pressed for the application of the fixed boundary principle between Nepal and India rather than rely on river demarcations. At first lukewarm to starting the idea, the Indian side agreed to the proposal, and work was begun to mark a permanent frontier starting in Nepal's eastern Tarai. It immediately hit a problem. Mechi, the border river of east Nepal, at a certain point between Galgalia in India and Bhadrapur in Nepal was thought to be flowing within Nepal. A border marker known as the "Jungay Pillar" after Nepal's first Rana ruler Jung Bahadur, stands well to the east of the Mechi, and this had been regarded as the border.