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Nepal's Election: a Peaceful Revolution?
NEPAL’S ELECTION: A PEACEFUL REVOLUTION? Asia Report N°155 – 3 July 2008 TABLE OF CONTENTS EXECUTIVE SUMMARY ...................................................................................................... i I. INTRODUCTION ............................................................................................................. 1 II. THE CAMPAIGN ............................................................................................................. 2 A. THE MAOIST MACHINE................................................................................................................2 B. THE STUTTERING CHALLENGE.....................................................................................................3 C. THE MADHESIS PARTIES: MOTIVATION AMID MUTUAL SUSPICION .............................................4 D. THE LEGACY OF CONFLICT ..........................................................................................................5 III. THE VOTE ........................................................................................................................6 A. THE TECHNICAL MANAGEMENT ..................................................................................................6 B. THE VOTE ITSELF ........................................................................................................................7 C. DID VOTERS KNOW WHAT THEY WERE DOING?.........................................................................8 D. REPOLLING ..................................................................................................................................9 -
Nepal-India Think Tank Summit 2018 Opening Ceremony Session I
Summit Schedule Nepal-India Think Tank Summit 2018 Registration and Breakfast 8:00 AM- 9:00 AM 9:00 AM-10:00 AM Opening Ceremony Opening Remarks: Mr. Shyam KC, Research and Development Director, AIDIA Chair Remarks: Shri Shakti Sinha, Director, Nehru Memorial Museum and Library (NMML) Special Remarks: H.E. Manjeev Singh Puri, Ambassador of India to Nepal Keynote Speech: Shri Ram Madhav, National General Secretary, Bharatiya Janata Party and Director, India Foundation Special Guest Remarks: Hon'ble Mr. Matrika Prasad Yadav, Minister for Industry, Commerce & Supplies Special Address: Chief Guest Rt. Hon’ble Former Prime Minister of Nepal, Pushpa Kamal Dahal ‘Prachanda’ Vote of Thanks: Mr. Sunil KC, Founder/CEO, Asian Institute and Diplomacy and International Affairs (AIDIA) Opening Session Brief Think Tank, as a shaper of various policy related questions, acts as a bridge between the world of idea and action. And it recommends best possible policy options to the government to meet the daunting challenges in the domestic and the international affairs. The session aims to locate the major role of the think tank in addressing the emerging foreign policy questions and the importance of cooperation between the think-tank of Nepal and India. 10:00 AM-11:30 AM Session I: Building Innovative Cooperation between Indo-Nepal Think Tank: The Partnership Chair Hon'ble Mr. Gagan Thapa, Member of Parliament, Nepali Congress Panelists: Prof. Dr Shambhu Ram Simkhada, Convener, CNI Think Tank, Former Permanent Representative of Nepal to the United Nations Major General Rajiv Narayanan, AVSM, VSM (Retd) Shri Shakti Sinha, Director, Nehru Memorial Museum and Library (NMML) Dr. -
In a Big Blow to Oli, Supreme Court Annuls Appointments of 20 Ministers
WITHOUT F EAR OR FAVOUR Nepal’s largest selling English daily Vol XXIX No. 125 | 8 pages | Rs.5 O O Printed simultaneously in Kathmandu, Biratnagar, Bharatpur and Nepalgunj 35.6 C 14.0 C Wednesday, June 23, 2021 | 09-03-2078 Nepalgunj Jomsom In a big blow to Oli, Supreme Court annuls appointments of 20 ministers Interim order asserts government is a caretaker one and terms induction of new ministers earlier this month, after prime minister lost a confidence vote, unconstitutional. TIKA R PRADHAN final hearing on petitions against his KATHMANDU, JUNE 22 May 21 House dissolution. With Tuesday’s order, the Oli gov- The KP Sharma Oli government is a ernment is left with five ministers, caretaker government. including himself. This is what the Supreme Court The Article of the constitution the said on Tuesday, as it quashed appoint- court has cited to relieve the 20 minis- ments of 17 ministers and three minis- ters of their positions states that if ters of state, citing Article 77 (3) of the the Office of the Prime Minister falls constitution. vacant after the prime minister fails Responding to six different peti- to win a vote of confidence or resigns, tions filed against Oli’s move of the same Council of Ministers shall expanding his Council of Ministers continue to act until another Council twice after his May 21 House dissolu- of Ministers is constituted. tion decision–on June 4 and June 10–a Oli lost a vote of confidence on May divisional bench of Chief Justice 10 after at least 28 members from his Cholendra Shumsher Rana and jus- own party, the CPN-UML, decided to POST PHOTO: KABIN ADHIKARI tice Prakash Kumar Dhungana called abstain. -
Nepal's Constitution (Ii): the Expanding
NEPAL’S CONSTITUTION (II): THE EXPANDING POLITICAL MATRIX Asia Report N°234 – 27 August 2012 TABLE OF CONTENTS EXECUTIVE SUMMARY ...................................................................................................... i I. INTRODUCTION ............................................................................................................. 1 II. THE REVOLUTIONARY SPLIT ................................................................................... 3 A. GROWING APART ......................................................................................................................... 5 B. THE END OF THE MAOIST ARMY .................................................................................................. 7 C. THE NEW MAOIST PARTY ............................................................................................................ 8 1. Short-term strategy ....................................................................................................................... 8 2. Organisation and strength .......................................................................................................... 10 3. The new party’s players ............................................................................................................. 11 D. REBUILDING THE ESTABLISHMENT PARTY ................................................................................. 12 1. Strategy and organisation .......................................................................................................... -
An Application of Doctrine of Necessity: Previous Constituent Assembly of Nepal 117
Jayshwal, An Application of Doctrine of Necessity: Previous Constituent Assembly of Nepal 117 AN APPLICATION OF DOCTRINE OF NECESSITY: PREVIOUS CONSTITUENT ASSEMBLY OF NEPAL AND ITS TIME EXTENSION TO AVOID CONSTITUTIONAL UNCERTAINTY Vijay Pd. Jayshwal* Department of Constitutional Law, Kathmandu School of Law, Dadhikot 09 Purbanchal University-44811, Bhakatpur, New Thimi, Kathmandu, Nepal Abstract This paper aims to investigate issues in relation of constitutional doctrine which had potential debate among the jurists of Nepal for the issues of time extension. The paper will also argue some weaknesses in the constituent assembly and their role expected by the people of Nepal. This paper will discuss about the evolution of constitution in Nepal, its features, the principle of Constitutionalism embodied in Nepalese constitution. This paper will further argue about the legitimacy of Doctrine of Necessity and its application in Nepal. In last, this paper will show the possibility of constitutional uncertainty by newly elected constituent assembly. Keywords: constituent assembly, constitutional uncertainty, constitution. Intisari Penulisan ini dalam rangka mengkaji doktrin konstitusional yang tengah ramai diperdebatkan oleh para ahli hukum di Nepal, khususnya berkaitan dengan isu mengenai perpanjangan waktu. Me- lalui tulisan ini, terdapat temuan yang menunjukkan beberapa kelemahan yang ada dalam majelis konstituate Nepal di samping peran-perannya sebagaimana yang diharapkan oleh rakyat Nepal. Tulisan ini membahas pula mengenai evolusi konstitusi Nepal sebagaimana diwujudkan dalam prinsip-prinsip konstitusionalism yang dianut oleh Konstitusi Nepal. Lebih lanjut, berkaitan de- ngan legitimasi dari Doctrin of Necessity dan penerapannya di Nepal. Pada akhirnya, tulisan ini akan memberikan gambaran mengenai kemungkinan ketidakpastian secara konstitusional berkai- tan dengan kondisi majelis konstituante yang baru saja terpilih. -
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. -
The World Factbook
The World Factbook South Asia :: Nepal Introduction :: Nepal Background: In 1951, the Nepali monarch ended the century-old system of rule by hereditary premiers and instituted a cabinet system of government. Reforms in 1990 established a multiparty democracy within the framework of a constitutional monarchy. An insurgency led by Maoists broke out in 1996. The ensuing 10-year civil war between Maoist and government forces witnessed the dissolution of the cabinet and parliament and assumption of absolute power by the king in 2002. Several weeks of mass protests in April 2006 were followed by several months of peace negotiations between the Maoists and government officials, and culminated in a late 2006 peace accord and the promulgation of an interim constitution. Following a nationwide election in April 2008, the newly formed Constituent Assembly (CA) declared Nepal a federal democratic republic and abolished the monarchy at its first meeting the following month. The CA elected the country's first president in July. Between 2008 and 2011 there were four different coalition governments, led twice by the United Communist Party of Nepal-Maoist, which received a plurality of votes in the 2008 CA election, and twice by the Communist Party of Nepal-United Marxist-Leninist (UML). After the CA failed to draft a constitution by the May 2012 deadline set by the Supreme Court, then Prime Minister Baburam BHATTARAI dissolved the CA. Months of negotiations ensued until March 2013 when the major political parties agreed to create an interim government headed by then Chief Justice Khil Raj REGMI with a mandate to hold elections for a new CA. -
Senior Leaders Skip CA Meetings
Senior Leaders Skip CA Meetings Bhuwan KC Published date: 20 September 2010 http://asd.org.np/en/transition/constitution/analytical/80-skip-ca-meetings The CA sat for 100 meetings in two years. According to the CA Secretariat employees, Nepali Congress president Girija Prasad Koirala had reached the CA meeting hall only four times. When he died on 20 March 2010, he had not signed on the attendance register even once. UCPN (M) chairperson Pushpa Kamal Dahal attended eight meetings. He attended five meetings after resigning from the prime minister’s post. He last attended the meeting on 4 February 2010. Senior Nepali Congress leader Sher Bahadur Deuba attended seven meetings in two years. He did not attend a single meeting for the whole of 2066 BS (mid-April 2009 to mid-April 2010). Prime Minister Madhav Kumar Nepal attended 16 meetings of the Constituent Assembly. Comparatively, UML chairperson Jhala Nath Khanal was more active in attending 34 meetings. Among leaders of the big parties, Nepali Congress parliamentary leader Ram Chandra Poudel has attended the most meetings. He not only attends the meetings but also participates in the discussions. He also gave presentations in his 63 meeting attendances. Leaders of the smaller parties attended most of the meetings and actively took part in discussions. Rastriya Janamorcha chairperson Chitra Bahadur K.C. attended 93 meetings. By looking at the meeting attendance of the top leaders of the major parties, it is clear that the meetings are not their priorities. They did not take part in discussions in serious issues raised in the meetings. -
January 14, 2011
ICAPP Workshop on Human Trafficking (Kathmandu, Nepal, January 16-18, 2014) ICAPP/WW/1W/002 List of Participants Political Parties (20) Azerbaijan, Republic of 1. Yeni (New) Azerbaijan Party - Hon. Dr. Malahat Ibrahimqizi, Member of Parliament and Co-Chairperson of ICAPP Women’s Wing - Hon. Sadagat Valiyeva, Member of Parliament and Head of the Party Organization of Nizami District Bhutan, Kingdom of 2. People’s Democratic Party - Ms. Tadin Wangmo, Spokesperson and Director of Media & Information Center Cambodia, Kingdom of 3. Cambodian People’s Party - H.E. Chhay Vannoeun, Secretary of State, Office of the Council of Ministers - Mr. Kong Chanveasna, Director of International Relations, Office of the Council of Ministers China, People’s Republic of 4. Communist Party of China - Hon. Mu Hong, Director General of the All China Women’s Federation of the Communist Party of China and Vice Chairperson of the ICAPP Women’s Wing - Ms. Li Lihua, Division Director of the All China Women’s Federation of the Communist Party of China - Ms. Huang Shu, Division Director of the All China Women’s Federation of the Communist Party of China - Ms. Gao Hao, Desk Officer at the All China Women’s Federation of the Communist Party of China India, Republic of 5. Bharatiya Janata Party - Dr. Rajani Sarin, Co-Convener Korea, Republic of 6. Saenuri (New Frontier) Party - Hon. Dr. Park In-sook, Member of the National Assembly and Co-Chairperson of the ICAPP Women’s Wing 7. Democratic Party - Hon. Lim Su-kyung, Member of the National Assembly Malaysia 8. United Malay National Organization (UMNO) - Hon. -
Forum for Participatory Democracy
PARTICIPATORY DEMOCRACY Practices and Reflections Forum for Participatory Democracy CONTENTS Abbreviation............................................................................................................................................................i Foreword ................................................................................................................................................................iii Bimal Kumar Phnuyal Acknowledgment .................................................................................................................................................v Prologue ....................................................................................................................................................................1 Mukti Rijal Building State for Democratic Governance .............................................................................................9 Chandradev Bhatta FES Nepal Civil Society and Democracy in Nepal ..................................................................................................... 17 Kalyan Bhakta Mathema Freelance Contributor with Special Interest on Civil Society and Democratization Local Governance and Democratization in Nepal ............................................................................... 31 Mukti Rijal, Ph.D Institute for Governance and development (IGD) State, Women and Democratization in Nepal ...................................................................................... 37 Seira Tamang Women Rights -
Landlessness, Exclusion, and Deprivation in Nepal
“ Land is Life, Land is Power”: Landlessness, Exclusion, and Deprivation in Nepal “ Land is Life, Land is Power”: Landlessness, Exclusion, and Deprivation in Nepal Elisabeth Wickeri Executive Director Leitner Center for International Law and Justice Fordham Law School This Report is a project of the Crowley Program in International Human Rights of the Leitner Center for International Law and Justice at Fordham Law School. The views expressed herein remain those of the author and are not reflective of the official position of Fordham Law School or Fordham University. The report was first edited by the staff of the Fordham International Law Journal and was published as “Land is Life, Land is Power”: Landlessness, Exclusion, and Deprivation in Nepal, 34 FORDHAM INT’L L.J. 4 930–1041 (2011). The substance of this printed report is the same, save for the addition of photos, captions, and other design elements. Introduction 2 Contents Acknowledgements 5 Part I Legal and Political Context of Land Rights in Nepal 6 A. Overview 6 B. Nepal’s International Obligations 6 C. Codified Discrimination 7 D. Land and Property in Nepali Law 9 1. The Traditional Legal Framework: State Landlordism 9 Overview of the Raikar System 9 Tenants Rights 9 Bonded Labor 10 2. Dismantling Raikar: Changes and Status Quo 10 Overview 10 Emergence of Private Property Rights 10 Land Ceilings 11 Rights and Registration and “Invisible Landlessness” 12 Tenure Security 13 Indigenous Rights in Land 13 E. Land, Conflict, and the New Nepal 13 1. Overview 13 2. Land and Conflict 13 3. Transition and Nepal’s New Constitution 14 Part II Landlessness in Nepal: The Impact of Exclusion 15 A. -
131 7 - 13 February 2003 16+4 Pages Rs 25
#131 7 - 13 February 2003 16+4 pages Rs 25 BHAGIRATH○○○○○○○○○○○○○○○○○○○ YOGI “They should have guidelines and, if need he ceasefire has held for ten days be, get international agencies to monitor now. But an even more difficult job compliance on the ground,” says Sudip T lies ahead; agreeing on guidelines for Pathak, of the rights group, HURON. dialogue, negotiating a common agenda, Let the talks begin But all these details will pale in keeping factions left out of the peace comparison when the hard bargaining on process together, and not losing sight of the substantive issues actually start. The two goal. Negotiations need trust, tenacity and togetherness. sides need to agree on an immediate setting There are worrying signs that political up of an all-party interim government parties excluded from the process are (perhaps including Maoist ministers) and getting agitated. The cabinet hasn’t been elections to a constituent assembly to able to decide on the composition of its change the constitution. In his address, negotiating team even though the Maoists Chand made a pointed reference to Nepal’s have named a squad leader in ideologue “monarchial culture”, hinting that this was Baburam Bhattarai. non-negotiable. However, sources tell us secret While the government and the parties contacts between the government’s bicker away, the Maoist leader Pushpa dialogue coordinator, Narayan Singh Pun Kamal Dahal has been busy this week and the Maoist team is taking place at an calling up leaders of political parties from undisclosed location on the southern edge his hideout. So far he has spoken to of the Valley.