US Ambassador to Nepal Randy W. Berry said that the Millennium Challenge Corporation (MCC) will help modernize Nepal’s energy and transportation sectors, assisting more than 23 million Nepalis.
The government of Nepal ratified the MCC agreement in February this year.
In a statement issued to mark the 75th year of diplomatic relations between the United States and Nepal on Friday, Ambassador Berry said that throughout these 75 years – and through the decades of change that have occurred in both of our countries – the United States and Nepal have stood with one another.
Americans know Nepalis as the people who make laudable advances in medicine and science, reach nearly impossible heights as mountaineers, honorably and bravely serve as UN peacekeepers, and enrich the world’s heritage through a vast diversity of arts and culture.
The United States’ historic support for Nepal’s health sector reflects the powerful results of our partnership. In the 1950s, malaria afflicted nearly 25 percent of the population. The US government through USAID, supported the Malaria Control Program and by 1968, malaria cases dropped from more than 2 million to 2,468 cases nationwide, the statement further read.
In the last two years since the beginning of the pandemic, the United States has donated nearly 3.8 million COVID-19 vaccine doses to Nepal to date, and given over $124.8 million in COVID assistance.
“The foundation of this multi-generational US– Nepal relationship is people-to-people connections, sovereignty, and democratic values. Today, we need each other more than ever to tackle difficult issues like addressing the climate crisis and protecting democracy in the face of rising authoritarianism. We look forward to doing this together, giving us the results that this friendship has given us for generations,” Ambassador Berry said in the statement.