Prachanda, who was elected as the Prime Minister for the second time on August 3, said the top focus of the new dispensation is to create the "right atmosphere" before the implementation of the Constitution and pave way for the necessary amendments.
"We have already made two amendments," he said.
Prachanda, who is on a four-day goodwill visit to India, his first foreign visit after assuming power, was addressing the Nepali diaspora at the Nepalese embassy here.
"There is a need to unite Nepal and its people despite differences in ethnicities, language, caste, class," Prachanda said.
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Emphasising on the need to unite those in the Terai, hills and the plains, the Prime Minister of Nepal said, if that does not happen, then Nepal's sovereignty will be mere words.
"If they are not united then the political crisis will loom large," he said.
The Madhesi parties had led a six month-long agitation, mainly to protest against the seven-province federal model enshrined in the Constitution. At least 50 people were killed during the protests in south Nepal last year over the issue.
During his interaction, the Nepalese community also complained that they played a prominent role during the movement against the monarchy, but since the new democratic polity came into being they have been forgotten.