The BBC recently received an outflow report on the "Government of Nepal condemns China's occupation of Nepalese territory". The leaked report was compiled by the Nepalese government commissioned by the "Border Dispute Investigation Team" in September 2021. The text claims that China has crossed the border and occupied territory in the Humla region of western Nepal. The BBC said it was unclear why the Nepalese authorities had not released the report, and the Nepalese government had not responded to the media's questions. As of February 10, only Nepal's Communications Minister Gyanendra Bahadur Karki issued a statement clarifying that if there are border issues with neighboring countries,
they will be dealt with diplomatically. "There should be no such disputes, and the Nepalese government will continue to work hard to prevent similar situations from happening," Karki said at a regular news conference in Kathmandu, Nepal's capital. Nepal's "Kathmandu Post" (Kathmandu Post) revealed that, in fact, the investigation team that wrote the report wedding photo retouching services was asked by the outside world in September last year about the possible time for the release of the investigation results. Mani Pokharel only said at the time that since the investigation team is made up of Nepalese cabinet members, the timing of the publication of the report should be decided by the government. "We have no right to share part or all of this report with the media or other outside parties,
everything will follow the instructions of the cabinet," Beaucarell said. Nepal and China have successively signed a number of border demarcation treaties since 1961. The two sides agreed in 1963 to delimit the border with 79 main pillars and 20 auxiliary pillars erected on the border of Humla. The boundary starts from the Himalayas and stretches for about 1,400 kilometers. However, most of the borders are located in sparsely populated and difficult-to-reach remote areas, and the borders are only marked with numbered posts, which are often several kilometers apart, making it difficult to accurately determine the location of the boundary. Is China really encroaching on Nepal's territory?