This Article is From Jan 04, 2016

After A Gap of 27 Years, Bus Service Resumes Between India And Nepal

After A Gap of 27 Years, Bus Service Resumes Between India And Nepal

The service was suspended 27 years back in the wake of the Indo-Nepal Trade and Transit Treaty.

Banbasa, Uttarakhand: After a gap of 27 years, a bus service between India and Nepal via Champawat in Uttarakhand resumed today much to the delight of people on either side of the border.

The bus which runs between Kanchanpur in Nepal close to Banbasa border in Champavat district of Uttarakhand and Anand Vihar, Delhi has been regularised from today after being run on a trial basis for a week, in-charge of Sharda barrage international police station BM Upreti said.

The service had been suspended 27 years back in the wake of the Indo-Nepal Trade and Transit Treaty, he said.

"Resumption of the service between the two countries after its prolonged suspension has been welcomed by locals on either side of the border as about eight to ten thousand Nepalis travel in these buses on a daily basis from Kanchanpur district, Dandel Dhura, Voti, Sapen, Acham, Kalali, Jagbuddha and Siddhartha Nagar areas in Nepal," he said.

The income from the area's Tanakpur depot is also considered one of the major sources of income for Uttarakhand Parivahan Nigam, the official said.

People on both sides of the border have family as well as trade relations with each other and they are very happy about the resumption of the service after long years of suspension, he said.

These air conditioned buses with Indian and Nepalese flags painted on their bodies will enter the Nepalese district of Kanchanpur at 6 am everyday and start for Delhi from there at 6 pm every evening, Mr Upreti said.

No special documents are required to travel in these buses which provides free wi-fi connectiviy and a bottle of mineral water for free to the passengers, he said.

 
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