Nepal Is Walking a Tightrope Between India and China India-China Tensions Are Complicating a Simmering Political Crisis in Kathmandu

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Nepal Is Walking a Tightrope Between India and China India-China Tensions Are Complicating a Simmering Political Crisis in Kathmandu OPINION / CHINA Nepal is walking a tightrope between India and China India-China tensions are complicating a simmering political crisis in Kathmandu. by Arif Rafiq 29 Jul 2020 Chinese President Xi Jinping and Nepalese Prime Minister KP Sharma Oli greet during their bilateral meeting in Kathmandu, Nepal, Oct 13, 2019 [Bikash Dware/The Rising Nepal via AP] This year, amid a raging pandemic, a looming global economic crisis and devastating floods and landslides, the Himalayan nation of Nepal has been in political and diplomatic turmoil over its disputed border with its much larger neighbour, India. The dispute has deepened strains within the current government and reignited debate over the future of Nepal's relations with India and China. On May 8, India inaugurated a link road built in a disputed territory which falls near a strategic three-way junction with Nepal and China. Nepal's Prime Minister KP Sharma Oli, who was already facing multiple domestic political challenges, adopted a defiant stance against New Delhi and deemed the new road an attack on Nepal's sovereignty. He issued a new map which places the disputed region within Nepal's borders and swiftly passed it through both houses of the parliament. His ruling Nepal Communist Party (NCP) also pushed an amendment to the country's citizenship law that requires foreign women marrying Nepali men (most of whom are Indian) to wait for seven years for naturalisation. Oli's nationalist stance earned him some much-needed support among the Nepalese public, but proved insufficient to silence his many critics who have long been demanding his resignation citing his failure to provide effective leadership at a time of crisis. Commentators and officials both in India and Nepal accused him of cynically using the border dispute to stir nationalist sentiment and outmanoeuvre his rivals in the NCP, or acting at China's behest. In response, Oli has claimed that his political rivals within the ruling party are "colluding with India to oust him from power". His chief opponent in the NCP, former Prime Minister Pushpa Kamal Dahal - commonly known as "Prachanda" - described the accusation as "neither politically correct nor diplomatically appropriate," asserting that it was he, not India, who sought Oli's resignation. Rivalries within the NCP undoubtedly played a role in aggravating Nepal's political crisis. Nevertheless, it is also impossible to deny the significant role Nepal's two giant neighbours, India and China, have played in bringing about the turmoil. All politics is local In May, the Indian Army chief General MM Naravane went out of his way to suggest that Oli's objection to India's road construction was instigated by Beijing. Indian news outlets, particularly those close to the ruling Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), relentlessly attacked Oli for his alleged pro-China and anti-India stance. One Indian channel directly warned Oli not to challenge India, a country on which "you depend so heavily". The Indian media has obsessively reported on the activities of the Chinese Ambassador to Nepal, Hou Yanqi, even levelling tasteless allegations that the "model- like" envoy has "honey-trapped" Oli. She has indeed been active throughout the crisis, holding numerous meetings with senior Nepali political leaders. And China does appear to be standing by Oli in this dispute, but there is no evidence that Beijing is goading him into taking on New Delhi. India too is by no means a mere bystander. Top Indian intelligence officials, according to a report in the Daily Pioneer, have been actively courting senior Nepali politicians. The Indian media's relentless onslaught on Oli also gives weight to the 68-year-old leader's accusations that India is actively working to topple his government. And so too does the recent past. India has brought down several governments in Kathmandu over the years. Observers generally see Oli as supported by Beijing and Prachanda by New Delhi. There is, however, little publicly available evidence to support the claim that New Delhi is propping up Prachanda to replace Oli. Prachanda has his own reasons for sparring with Oli. In 2018, the leftist parties of Oli and Prachanda merged. The two men have shared the post of chairman of the newly- formed NCP and reportedly agreed to alternate as prime minister over the course of the NCP's five-year term in power, which is now at its halfway point. Last November, Prachanda reportedly accepted a revised deal that would give him control over the party while allowing Oli to continue as prime minister. Oli appears not to have held up his end of the bargain, hence Prachanda's anger. Even if Prachanda is indeed backed by New Delhi, the partnership is likely tactical and temporary. Prachanda has had a complicated relationship with India. India facilitated the integration of Nepal's Maoist rebels - led by Prachanda - into the political fold in the mid-2000s, but also helped force Prachanda's resignation as prime minister in 2009 after he took on the Nepal Army, a key lever of Indian influence. Notably, Prachanda has not played the anti-Beijing card to gain the upper hand against Oli. In fact, he has also taken positions as of late that can be seen as pro- Beijing. While Oli supported the United States Millennium Challenge Corporation's (MCC) Nepal compact - which Washington says aims to increase the availability of electricity and lower the cost of transportation in the country - Prachanda opposed it, citing US statements linking the project to the Indo-Pacific Strategy, which is largely seen as a China containment policy. Prachanda made a veiled reference to the MCC project in an address to the Chinese Communist Party last month, stating that any developmental assistance inconsistent with the country's policy of non-alignment "can't be accepted by any means." Indian heavy-handedness created opening for China If Oli is forced to resign, it would not necessarily be an enduring setback for Beijing. As Nepali news editor Biswas Baral argues, the cohesion of the NCP is more important for Beijing than Oli's survival. Furthermore, the NCP leadership is likely to sustain its desire for China to play a balancing role even after Oli's departure, due to its deep- rooted fear of Indian dominance. Over the decades, India has played a paternalistic role in Nepal, which has been helpful in many ways. However, New Delhi has also been heavy-handed and abusive in its dealings with its Himalayan neighbour, leveraging the landlocked country's dependence on it for access to the sea. India is Nepal's largest trade partner, accounting for 65 percent of its imports and 57 percent of its exports in 2017. India has used connectivity as a coercive tool, blockading Nepal three times in the past 30 years - most recently in 2015 after a devastating earthquake. The blockade imposed by India on Nepal in 1989 was partly out of concerns over Nepal's growing proximity to China. While China's military sales to Nepal grew, India remained the predominant external power in the country. India's most recent blockade of Nepal has proved to be a strategic folly, stirring Nepali nationalism, which has had an anti-India strain. The blockade roughly coincided with China's launch of the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), giving Beijing an opportunity to step in and pledge large sums of aid and investment. China's massive investments in extending its domestic rail network toward its western and southwestern frontier amplify its efforts to reshape the region's economic geography. Its drive to expand connectivity in the region, for example, provided Nepal with an alternative route to the sea. In 2016, China and Nepal concluded a transport agreement that gives Kathmandu access to four Chinese eastern seaports. While India's Calcutta port is closest to Nepal by distance, Chinese rail service to Tibet, which borders Nepal, provides it with maritime access that may be shorter in time and more competitive in cost than Calcutta. In 2017, Nepal officially joined the Belt and Road Initiative, making clear to India, a lead opponent of the BRI, that it is now a country with options. More money, more problems There is, of course, a price to siding with China. Beijing is notorious for its unfair trade practices. And its economic partnerships with developing countries are often based on loans rather than grants. Many high-risk recipients of Chinese lending struggle to repay their debt to Beijing - a trend that has triggered accusations of "debt-trap diplomacy". Following their transport agreement, Beijing and Kathmandu are also in talks for building a trans-Himalayan railway linking Nepal to China's domestic transport network, but the estimated $2.5bn cost of the project may eventually prove too expensive for Nepal. Should the project move forward on a loan basis, Kathmandu may struggle to generate the revenue-generating capacity to repay it, and the country could end up trading Indian dominance for Chinese. Allying with Beijing also requires ritualistic professions of agreement on its "core interests" and policing of Chinese national migrants and refugees, such as Uighurs and Tibetans. Notably, Nepal recently backed China's new national security law for Hong Kong. Neither China nor India are benign, altruistic powers. Nepali leaders appear to be aware of that. Even if Prachanda comes to power with some help and support from New Delhi, he is unlikely to push away Beijing's hand. Whoever leads Nepal in the years to come will have to manage a geopolitical environment that is only growing in complexity. Today, Nepal is area of contestation not just between China and India, but also in the broader U.S.-China Cold War.
Recommended publications
  • Reacting to Donald Trump's Challenge
    centro studi per i popoli extra-europei “cesare bonacossa” - università di pavia The Journal of the Italian think tank on Asia founded by Giorgio Borsa in 1989 Vol. XXIX / 2018 Reacting to Donald Trump’s Challenge Edited by Michelguglielmo Torri Nicola Mocci viella centro studi per i popoli extra-europei “cesare bonacossa” - università di pavia ASIA MAIOR The Journal of the Italian think tank on Asia founded by Giorgio Borsa in 1989 Vol. XXIX / 2018 Reacting to Donald Trump’s Challenge Edited by Michelguglielmo Torri and Nicola Mocci viella Asia Maior. The Journal of the Italian Think Tank on Asia founded by Giorgio Borsa in 1989. Copyright © 2019 - Viella s.r.l. & Associazione Asia Maior ISBN 978-88-3313-241-9 (Paper) ISBN 978-88-3313-242-6 (Online) ISSN 2385-2526 (Paper) ISSN 2612-6680 (Online) Annual journal - Vol. XXIX, 2018 This journal is published jointly by the think tank Asia Maior (Associazione Asia Maior) & CSPE - Centro Studi per i Popoli extra-europei «Cesare Bonacossa», University of Pavia Asia Maior. The Journal of the Italian Think Tank on Asia founded by Giorgio Borsa in 1989 is an open-access journal, whose issues and single articles can be freely downloaded from the think tank webpage: www.asiamaior.org. Paper version Italy € 50.00 Abroad € 65.00 Subscription [email protected] www.viella.it Editorial board Editor-in-chief (direttore responsabile): Michelguglielmo Torri, University of Turin. Co-editor: Nicola Mocci, University of Sassari. associate editors: Axel Berkofsky, University of Pavia; Diego Maiorano, National University of Singapore, ISAS - Institute of South Asian Studies; Nicola Mocci, University of Sassari; Giulio Pugliese, King’s College London; Michelguglielmo Torri, University of Turin; Elena Valdameri, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology - ETh Zurich; Pierluigi Valsecchi, University of Pavia.
    [Show full text]
  • Himalayan Kingdoms: Nepal & Bhutan
    Exclusive Duke departure – October 30-November 13, 2018 HIMALAYAN KINGDOMS: NEPAL & BHUTAN 15 days from $5,872 total price from Boston, New York, Wash, DC ($5,195 air & land inclusive plus $677 airline taxes and fees) n this exhilarating journey, we discover Otwo distant and devout lands, different in fact yet similar in spirit. Hinduism in Nepal and Buddhism in Bhutan suffuse all aspects of life; in both, tradition and belief abide – and surrounding Himalayan scenery casts a truly awe-inspiring spell. NEPAL Punakha Nagarkot Kathmandu Paro Thimphu BHUTAN Map Legend Destination Air Motorcoach Entry/Departure Avg. High (°F) Oct Nov Kathmandu 80 74 The devout in the Himalayas hang prayer flags to promote peace and compassion. Thimphu 71 64 Paro 66 57 Day 1: Depart U.S. for Kathmandu, Nepal nunnery welcome seekers and visitors to study, medi- tate, and learn about the Mahayana Buddhism practiced Your Small Group Tour Highlights Day 2: Arrive Kathmandu We reach the Nepalese here. After our visit we enjoy a small group highlight capital tonight and transfer to our hotel. as we share lunch with a local family in their home. Opportunity to visit two Himalayan countries • Kathmandu Later we visit Shechen Clinic and Hospice, a human- touring • Kathmandu Valley excursion • Visit to Buddhist Day 3: Kathmandu This morning we meet our itarian project that provides sustainable medical services monastery • Lunch with a Nepalese family in their home fellow travelers and Odysseys Tour Director for a to local residents; then tour Boudhanath, one of the • Patan’s traditional arts and handcrafts • Hindu shrine at briefing about the journey ahead.
    [Show full text]
  • Download Publication
    No. 43 Working Papers Working Negotiating Between Unequal Neighbours: India‘s Role in Nepal‘s Recent Constitution-Making Process Prakash Bhattarai December 2018 1 Negotiating Between Unequal Neighbours: India’s Role in Nepal’s Recent Constitution-Making Process1 Prakash Bhattarai ABSTRACT Nepal’s post-conflict constitution-making process has seen the involvement of many international actors. While studies on democracy promotion, to this day, mainly focus on Western “donors” and international organizations, this paper looks at the role played by India in the complicated process of moving from a peace agreement to the establishment of an inclusive, democratic constitution in Nepal. More specifically, it is analysed how a powerful neighbouring democracy (India) participated in what is essentially a domestic negotiation process (constitution-making) with a view to influencing the emerging demo- cratic regime. In terms of the issues on the negotiation table, the analysis shows that India, in pushing for an inclusive constitution, pursued the specific agenda of supporting the inclusion of the Madheshis, an ethnic group mostly living in Nepal’s Terai region. In terms of negotiation strategies, the paper identifies four different ways in which India tried to influence the constitution: high-level dialogue; economic blockade; international coalition building; and targeted support of domestic oppositional forces in Nepal. Com- prehensive as this negotiation strategy was, it only met with partial success. Parameters that limited India’s influence included the domestic strength and legitimacy of the official Nepali position (elite alignment; popular support) as well as scepticism concerning In- dia’s role in Nepal, which was reinforced by India’s overly partisan agenda.
    [Show full text]
  • Statement by Prime Minister and the Leader of Nepali Delegation Right Honorable Mr. K P Sharma Oli at the General Debate Of
    Statement by Prime Minister and the Leader of Nepali Delegation Right Honorable Mr. K P Sharma Oli at the General Debate of the 75th Session of United Nations General Assembly New York, 25 September 2020 Theme: -The future we want, the United Nations we need: reaffirming our collective commitment to multilateralism - confronting COVID-19 through effective multilateral action Mr. President Excellencies the Heads of State and Government, Mr. Secretary General, Distinguished delegates: I extend warm greetings to you all from Nepal, the land of Gautam Buddha and Sagarmatha, also known as the Mount Everest. I join with other leaders in expressing our profound grief and agony on the loss of lives around the world due to COVID-19, including in my own country. I congratulate you, Mr. President, and other members of the Bureau on your election and assure you of Nepal’s full support. 1 The outgoing President deserves our appreciation for successfully steering the 74th Session of the Assembly. We commend the Secretary General, Mr. Antonio Guterres, for his tireless efforts to enable the UN deliver at this difficult time. Mr. President, We are passing through an extraordinary time. The COVID-19 pandemic is confronting us as a crisis of epic proportion. Be it the magnitude of public health crisis, impact on livelihoods and societies or global economic recession, the fallouts of the pandemic have been colossal. We support the efforts of the United Nations, World Health Organization and the World Bank Group in leading the global response to the pandemic. In particular, we commend the UN Secretary General for launching the Comprehensive Response to COVID-19.
    [Show full text]
  • Kulekhani I Hydropower Station
    MESSAGE FROM THE MANAGING DIRECTOR I would like to express my sincere greetings to the Generation Directorate on the publication of its 12th edition of NEA “Generation Directorate Magazine” on the occasion of the 35th anniversary of Nepal Electricity Authority. I believe the precious data presented herein will be useful to the NEA stakeholders as well as the general public. The total installed capacity of the NEA owned power plants is 626.70 MW (20 hydro and 2 thermal) out of total 1332.86 MW in INPS. The annual generation from these power plants is 3011.43 GWh, which is 50.09% of the total energy generation in Nepal. Upper Trishuli 3A (60 MW) was inaugurated by Rt. Hon’ble Prime Minister KP Sharma Oli on 18 Nov, 2019. The long awaited cascade type Hydro power project, Kulekhani-III (14 MW) also started generation from 11 Oct, 2019. The taking over of this plant is still on hold due to the Covid-19 pandemic as well as a few other liabilities that need to be accomplished by the Contractor. Major rehabilitation or overhauling works were carried out in Kaligandaki A (including SCADA/ Control system upgradation), Middle Marsyangdi, Marsyangdi, Kulekhani- I & II, Sunkoshi, Modi, Trishuli, Devighat and Puwakhola HPS, even during the lockdown imposed by the government and the continued pandemic. This has ultimately resulted in minimizing generation outage due to breakdowns. These regular and timely maintenance has made Generation Directorate capable of supplying reliable and continuous energy to national grid. Finally, I’m thankful to all the employees working in the power plants, their plant managers and the entire team in Generation Directorate for putting in all the hard work to achieve the desired result.
    [Show full text]
  • For a Cleaner and Greener Kathmandu Valley Kathmandu, Nepal May 11, 1994
    OT FOR PUBLICATION CMC-1 WITHOUT WRITER'S CONSENT ] INSTITUTE OF CURRENT WORLD APA1RS For a cleaner and greener Kathmandu Valley Kathmandu, Nepal May 11, 1994 Mr. Peter B. Martin Institute of Currem World Aa'ah's 4 West Wheelock Street Hanover, New Hampshire 03755 USA Dear Peter, Touts, with trousers barely touching their ankles whisper in my ear,"Change mone)3 madam? Good price." The shops and restaurants blast out the best of the new and the old in Western mttsic as Madonna and Kansas mix with Nepali film songs in the sound waves of the nan'ow streets. "Come sit and drink tea with me madam. No? Maa-dam, it is breaking my heart!" a shopkeeper shouts as I pass by. That's me. A regular heart breaker. Welcome to Kathmandu. I am here for fmal arrangements for my visa into Bhutan, the largely unknown Himal Kingdom east of Nepal. Kathmandu seems relatively unchanged since my last Ssit in 1989. The narrow roads vind the same way" I remember. Shops overflow with the same goods; 'Free Tibet' T-shirts, Buddhist tankas delicately painted on canvas with colors from crushed stone, colorful woolen rugs, and silver jewelry inlaid with gem stones. The city itseff overflows with people and transport. Vehicle exhaust is black, thick and tickles the throat. I pity the individual standing behind a lonT when it shakes, grinds and exhales its choking fumes. I notice a number of motorists and pedestrians wearing small pieces of cloth across the nose and mouth, afftxed with string like a surgical mask.
    [Show full text]
  • Nepal Pm Kp Sharma Oli Expelled from Ncp
    NEPAL PM KP SHARMA OLI EXPELLED FROM NCP NEPAL PM KP SHARMA OLI EXPELLED FROM NCP EDITORIAL ARTICLES - https://www.successmantra.in/blog/post/article/editorial95 Nepal PM KP Sharma Oli has been expelled from the ruling Nepal Communist Party (NCP) over his decision to dissolve the Parliament. The Prime Minister was removed from the party by a Central Committee at a meeting of the party's splinter group held on January 24, 2021. The decision comes amid repeated threats by the rival faction leaders who had said that they would revoke Oli's membership over his decision to dissolve the Nepal Parliament. The rival faction spokesperson Narayankaji Shrestha said that the party leaders are planning further action against Oli after his ouster from the party. ABOUT THE RECENT ISSUE (PM OLI EXPELLED) The splinter group led by former Prime Ministers Pushpa Kamal Dahal and Madhav Kumar had earlier asked PM Oli for explanation for his unconstitutional decisions. The faction had event sent a letter to the Prime Minister's residence to seek clarification. However, PM Oli did not respond to the letter. The rival faction spokesperson said that they waited for long for a reply from the Prime Minister but he didn't reply to them. He added that the latest decision was taken by exercising the executive rights provided by the Central Committee of the party. Decisions by both factions didn’t come in line with party’s statute, so can’t update Nepal Communist Party's details. We've notified KP Oli & Pushpa Kamal Dahal, making it clear that Commission will maintain party's existing details ONGOING POLITICAL CRISIS IN NEPAL Recently, Nepal has drifted into a political crisis following its Prime Minister (PM) KP Sharma Oli’s decision to dissolve Parliament.
    [Show full text]
  • Statement by Hon'ble Commerce Minister of Bangladesh As The
    H. E. Tipu Munshi, MP Hon’ble Commerce Minister Government of the People’s Republic of Bangladesh Guest of Honour and Keynote Speaker at the Inaugural Ceremony of the 55th Annual General Meeting (AGM) of the Federation of Nepalese Chambers of Commerce & Industry (FNCCI) and Industry Commerce Day 10 April 2021 Statement by Hon’ble Commerce Minister of Bangladesh as the Guest of Honour and Keynote Speaker at the Inaugural Ceremony of the Federation of Nepalese Chambers of Commerce & Industry (FNCCI)’s 55th Annual General Meeting (AGM) and Industry Commerce Day, 10 April 2021 (Virtual) Excellency Mr. K. P. Sharma Oli, Right Honourable Prime Minister of Nepal and the Chief Guest of the Inaugural Ceremony, Distinguished Ministers, Mr. Shekhar Golchha, President, FNCCI, Distinguished guests, Ladies and Gentlemen, Let me first thank the Federation of Nepalese Chambers of Commerce and Industry (FNCCI) for inviting me at the Inaugural Ceremony of the 55th AGM of FNCCI which is also celebrated as the Industry Commerce Day. I feel honored to be invited as the key note speaker in a program where the Right Hon’ble Prime Minister of Nepal is present as the Chief Guest. I had been eagerly waiting for this event, but I had to cancel the visit because of the recent surge of the pandemic in Bangladesh. Nepal, the daughter of the Himalayas, has got the highest peak on earth and the range of sky-touching mountains have made this country amazingly beautiful. The natural and cultural beauty of Nepal has created a special place in my heart. But unfortunately, I missed out to enjoy the beauty this time.
    [Show full text]
  • Understanding Children's Risk and Agency in Urban Areas
    Understanding children’s risk and agency in urban areas for child-centred urban disaster risk reduction in Asia: Insights from Dhaka, Kathmandu, Manila and Jakarta Plan, IIED, ECO Nepal September 2013 Research Goal The research aims to generate an empirical evidence base on children’s risk and agency in urban areas that Plan International can use to inform the development of their Country Strategy Programmes (CSPs) and urban DRR programmes in Asia Four research questions • Which urban children are most at risk any why? • What are the factors that underpin urban children’s risk across the spectrum? • How can urban children participate in DRR as agents of change and resilience, and what are barriers and challenges they face in urban areas? • What the implications of this understanding for the development of child-centred urban DRR programmes? Research Method Qualitative methods • A total of 341 children participated in 16 focus groups (four in each city), including 183 girls (or 53.7 per cent) and 158 boys (or 46.3 per cent) between the ages of 8 and 20, achieving a relatively even gender balance and broad age distribution. • 3 children categories were targeted: street children, working children and squatter and ‘slum’ children. • Key informant interviews: to engage policymakers from relevant government departments and practitioners from local, national and international CSOs and development agencies as well as donors. Respondents were selected based on stakeholder mapping reports developed by consultants in each country, resulting in a
    [Show full text]
  • Icrc Broucure Final 2068 Rewrok English.Indd
    Pokhara H Nepalgunj Kathmandu H Chitwan Birgunj Delegation Janakpur Of ce Biratnagar H ICRC supported Physical Rehabilitation Center CONTACTS Green Pastures Hospital & Rehabilitation Center, HOW TO GET ASSISTANCE Hariyo Kharka, Pokhara. Tel: 061-431162/430099 People requiring physical rehabilitation services can contact Yerahity Rehabilitation Center, the Green Pastures Hospital or the Yerahity Rehabilitation Yerahity, Banasthali, Kathmandu. Centre directly. They can also contact their nearest Nepal Tel: 01-4880684/4880689 Red Cross Society Chapter / Sub-chapter or ICRC o!ces for or further information. Nepal Red Cross Society, Kalimati, Kathmandu. Tel: 01-4272761/4270650 Fax: 01-4271915 E-mail: [email protected] Web: www.nrcs.org or International Committee of the Red Cross, Physical Meen Bhawan, Naya Baneshwor, Kathmandu, Nepal. Tel: 01-4107285/4107279 Fax: 01-4107137 E-mail: [email protected] Web: www.icrc.org Rehabilitation ICRC Biratnagar ICRC Janakpur Tel: 021-470639/471358 Tel: 041-525126 Services ICRC Birgunj ICRC Nepalgunj Tel: 051-531690 Tel: 081-522262/525560 in Nepal ICRC Chitwan Tel: 056-523118 .28/002 06.2011 500 2010 T PHYSICAL REHABILITATION ICRC SUPPORT SERVICES PROVIDED Physicalrehabilitationhelpsrestorethefunctionalcapacityof In 2004, the ICRC in cooperation with the International Physical rehabilitation centres supported by the ICRC provide people who have lost limbs or injured spinal cords, allowing Nepal Fellowship (INF) started assisting the Green Pastures custom-made arti"cial limbs and support devices (orthoses), them to carry on as normal a life as possible. It includes both Hospital in Pokhara. The institution extended its support to crutches and wheelchairs designed according to the needs the provision of arti"cial limbs and other assistive devices the Yerahity Rehabilitation Centre run by the Nepal Army of the patients.
    [Show full text]
  • Chronology of Major Political Events in Contemporary Nepal
    Chronology of major political events in contemporary Nepal 1846–1951 1962 Nepal is ruled by hereditary prime ministers from the Rana clan Mahendra introduces the Partyless Panchayat System under with Shah kings as figureheads. Prime Minister Padma Shamsher a new constitution which places the monarch at the apex of power. promulgates the country’s first constitution, the Government of Nepal The CPN separates into pro-Moscow and pro-Beijing factions, Act, in 1948 but it is never implemented. beginning the pattern of splits and mergers that has continued to the present. 1951 1963 An armed movement led by the Nepali Congress (NC) party, founded in India, ends Rana rule and restores the primacy of the Shah The 1854 Muluki Ain (Law of the Land) is replaced by the new monarchy. King Tribhuvan announces the election to a constituent Muluki Ain. The old Muluki Ain had stratified the society into a rigid assembly and introduces the Interim Government of Nepal Act 1951. caste hierarchy and regulated all social interactions. The most notable feature was in punishment – the lower one’s position in the hierarchy 1951–59 the higher the punishment for the same crime. Governments form and fall as political parties tussle among 1972 themselves and with an increasingly assertive palace. Tribhuvan’s son, Mahendra, ascends to the throne in 1955 and begins Following Mahendra’s death, Birendra becomes king. consolidating power. 1974 1959 A faction of the CPN announces the formation The first parliamentary election is held under the new Constitution of CPN–Fourth Congress. of the Kingdom of Nepal, drafted by the palace.
    [Show full text]
  • TESTING TIMES for DEMOCRACY in NEPAL Relevant For: International Relations | Topic: India - Nepal
    Source : www.idsa.in Date : 2021-06-18 TESTING TIMES FOR DEMOCRACY IN NEPAL Relevant for: International Relations | Topic: India - Nepal More from the author The President of Nepal, Bidya Devi Bhandari, on May 22, exercising her power under Article 76(7) on the advice of Prime Minister K.P. Sharma Oli, dissolved the House of Representatives or the Lower House of the Nepal Parliament and announced fresh elections. This decision was taken after political parties failed to form a new government under Article 76(5) of the constitution. The president’s office in a statement said: “While considering the fact that same members have been counted on both sides [K.P. Sharma Oli and Sher Bahadur Deuba], members have supported one another against the party decision and request from the concerned party to disregard their support … both the claims to obtain vote of confidence of the House of Representatives as per the Article 76(5) of the Constitution to be appointed as the Prime Minister do not stand valid.”1 Therefore, neither of them could form a new government by May 21 (9:00 pm), as per the deadline set by the President a day before. This is the second time the House has been dissolved in last five months. Previously, it was dissolved in December 2020. The Supreme Court, however, had reinstated the House on February 23, 2021, after hearing over a dozen writ petitions questioning the decision to dissolve the House. Like last year, this time too, the decision to dissolve the House was met with overwhelming resistance from across the Nepali society and the opposition parties.
    [Show full text]