Greater Nepal Committee A Greater Nepal Committee was formed in Kathmandu in 1991, which wrote letters to the embassies of different countries claiming that India should "unconditionally return to Nepal", territories "east of Mechi river and west of Mahakali", which were ceded to the British in the
Treaty of Sugauli. The committee claimed to create a "world-wide public opinion" in favour of 'Greater Nepal'. The letter was signed by Surendra Dhakal, the former editor of Kathmandu weekly,
Rangamanch. Dhakal claimed that the Nepali leaders were cowed down by fear of India and that it was the moral and nationalistic duty of the people to raise such demands. is a Nepalese
NGO headed by Phanindra Nepal, which champions the cause of Greater Nepal. The organisation disowns the 1810
Sugauli Treaty and the 1950
Treaty of Peace and Friendship with India. It demands the return of the land that belonged to Nepal before the signing of the Sugauli Treaty. This involves land up to the
Sutlej River in the west, the
Teesta River in the east ("
Shimla to
Darjeeling" in the organisation's parlance) and extending up to
Varanasi in the south. Scholars Mishra and Haque state that the organisation is rhetorically very powerful. The map of Greater Nepal produced by the organisation provides power to the movement by building "meanings and nostalgic longings". The movement has a web page in the
Nepali language, a Facebook page and blog sites. Their map includes the Indian towns of
Varanasi,
Ballia,
Bahraich,
Pilibhit and
Jaunpur within Greater Nepal. The Maoist leader
Prachanda dismissed the claims in an interview with the
Times of India as a "media-created stunt". But according to the
Times of India the book was readily available in and around the Maoist camps along the Indo-Nepal border in 2005.
Nepalese scholars Scholars and retired officials such as
Buddhi Narayan Shrestha (former Director of the Survey Department) and
Dwarika Nath Dhungel (former secretary of Water Resources) have published scholarly articles with maps labelled "Greater Nepal". Shrestha has also spoken in Greater Nepal gatherings and made media comments in its favour, declaring "The land we lost to the East India Company should not belong to India. It is ours." Shreshta narrates that, before the Sugauli Treaty, Nepal extended up to the confluence of
Gandak and
Ganges Rivers in the south, and to
Shigatse and
Tashilhunpo in the north. "It was
called the 'Greater Nepal'", he states, without mentioning who called it so. British India apparently "did not like" Greater Nepal as a unified country and therefore dismembered it. He alleges that the British wanted to expand trade into Tibet but, since Nepal stood in the way, they needed to cut it down. ==Official positions==