A cabinet meeting held last evening, ahead of Oli's maiden India visit, took the decision to constitute an 11-member political committee under the leadership of Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Kamal Thapa to recommend solutions for resolving the dispute on provincial boundaries.
Minister for Information and Communications Sherdhan Rai told the media that the political committee has been formed with an aim to resolve the ongoing political crisis in the country.
The members of the committee were to be named through political consensus among all parties including UDMF.
However, the UDMF said it would not accept the political mechanism formed by the government.
The UDMF, in a statement, said the panel would be unable to address its demands as it was formed "unilaterally".
The government decision to form the committee did not have an intention of solving the current problems but was just a bid to make Prime Minister Oli's India trip successful, it alleged.
"Today's cabinet meeting has decided to constitute the
body which will be given full shape once the prime minister returns home from India visit," Education Minister Girirajmani Pokharel was quoted as saying by My Republica.
"We have decided to select its members later with the view to incorporate representatives from agitating Madhesi parties as well," he said yesterday.
The cabinet decision on forming the committee came a day before Oli's six-day India visit as part of his commitment that the government would form the political body prior to his trip.
Madhesis, who are largely of Indian-origin, led a nearly six-month-long violent protest over better representation in the Parliament and the federal structure of the new Constitution that divides their ancestral homeland that claimed over 50 lives before being called off unexpectedly.
The UDMF officially announced withdrawal of their protests including the border blockade earlier this month.
