In November 1950, King Tribhuvan, from  his palace prison, managed to flee India. It is said that the King  Tribhuvan had requested Pandit Nehru to merge Nepal into Indian union  but Nehru ignored the request. India-Nepal singed the historic Peace and  Friendship Treaty of 1950, here by India opened its vast resources to  the citizens of Nepal. As per the treaty none of the Nepal’s citizen is  regarded as foreigner in India and vice-versa. Ultimately, Rana regime  came to an end in 1951 and once again the Shah dynasty rule was  established under a simple constitutional monarchy system of government,  a democratic government with powerful Prime Minister.
In 1956, Dr. K.I. Singh government  banned teaching of Hindi. This led to a pro-Hindi and anti-Hindi  movement in Nepal. The government of India remained unconcerned about  the ban. Later on, in 1959 B.P. Koirala introduced Hindi in Madhes (foot  hill of Nepal) but King Mahendra revoked it after a coup in 1962. He  dismissed the elected government and took absolute powers in his own  hand. This led to a sharp difference between India and king Mahendra.  India was in favor of democracy but China supported the king. Taking  advantage of Indo-Sino war of 1962 King floated one –state-one Language  policy declaring Nepali as national and official language of Nepal at  the suffering of other languages and completely banned Hindi in 1963.  Prior to this, Hindi and Nepali both enjoyed an equal status as official  and educational language of Nepal. Kashi was the base of Nepali  publications. Hindi and Nepali have the same Devnagri script, same  Sanskrit origin and a lot of similarities in words. There was never  dispute in-between the two languages. Unfortunately King, under Chinese  influence, tried to provoke and plant the anti-Hindi, anti-India  feelings among the Nepali-speaking people of Nepal.
 
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