Kathmandu, May 16 : Assistant Foreign Minister of Australia, Tim Watts, has arrived on a two-day visit of Nepal.
The centrepiece of Mr Watts’ visit
is going to be the handover of a 13th century wooden tunala (temple strut) from
Ratneshwar Temple at Sulima Square to the local community in a ceremony
organised at Patan Museum.
The Art Gallery of New South Wales has returned this important artefact to Nepal, and will be represented at the handover by Director Dr Michael Brand, according to a media release issued by the Australian Embassy in Kathmandu this morning.
During the visit, Assistant
Minister Watts is scheduled to pay a courtesy call on Prime Minister Pushpa
Kamal Dahal and Foreign Minister Narayan Prakash Saud. He will convey
Australia’s appreciation of its close cooperation with Nepal over 63 years of
diplomatic relations and thriving people-to-people linkages.
The Nepali community is Australia’s
fastest growing migrant population and currently numbers around 130,000, adds
the release.
The Australian Assistant Minister
will also visit BioVac Nepal in Banepa, where academic and research cooperation
and technology transfer from Australia has supported BioVac to become a
state-of-the-art diagnostic and animal vaccine production facility.
He will then visit the Tilganga Institute of Ophthalmology (TIO). In the past thirty years, the Australian Government and the Fred Hollows Foundation have supported TIO’s work to provide eye care services in Nepal, as well as the manufacture of intraocular lenses for national and global distribution.
Likewise, Watts will hand over an
Australian-made Portable Altitude Chamber to the Himalayan Rescue Association
for its use at the Pheriche Medical Outpost and Everest ER Clinic at Everest
Base Camp.
It may be noted that Assistant
Minister Watts’ visit to Nepal is part of a four-country program that includes
his participation in the sixth Indian Ocean Conference in Bangladesh, and
bilateral visits to Bhutan and India. (RSS)