Nepal averts crisis by hair’s breadth

Kathmandu, May 29 (IANS) The nascent republic of Nepal averted an unprecedented constitutional crisis by a hair’s breadth Friday midnight after the opposition Maoist party agreed to bail the coalition government out and extend the term of the interim parliament by a year.

In return, embattled Prime Minister Madhav Kumar Nepal is expected to step down, though it was not immediately clear when.

Only 17 minutes before midnight, Nepal’s endangered parliament, that was to have convened at 8 a.m., sat to decide the fate of the country.

After nearly 15 hours of last-minute negotiations, the opposition Maoist party decided to withdraw its objection to the government’s proposal to extend the term of interim parliament and the proposal was passed unanimously.

AS per a peace agreement, Nepal was to have promulgated a new constitution by Friday midnight. However, the statute could not be unveiled due to protracted disputes between the ruling parties and the Maoists for over a year.

The impasse triggered fears that in the absence of a new constitution, parliament would be dissolved automatically at Friday midnight along with the government, unleashing an unprecedented crisis and vacuum.

But now, the house has been given a new lease of life for a year. The new constitution will have to be tabled within that.

Nepal PM says Maoists not trustworthy

Kathmandu, May 14 (ANI): Prime Minister Madhav Kumar Nepal on Friday said the UCPN (Maoist) cannot be trusted.

Nepal made this remark after visiting a school teacher in Okhaldhunga who is in hospital here after being beaten by Maoists.

Nepal said these kind of incidents exposed the true nature of Maoists.

“The Maoists talk about consensus, while at the same time, continue these kind of attacks against innocent civilians, Nepalnews quoted the Prime Minister, as, saying.

Mentioning that the Maoist leadership should take the charge of such attacks, Nepal said, “Such activities prove that Maoists say one thing and do something else.” (ANI)

Nepal PM won”t resign unless army integration issue is settled

Kathmandu, May 10 (ANI): Prime Minister Madhav Kumar Nepal”s political advisor Raghuji Panta has said Nepal will not step down until there is an agreement on the integration of Maoist combatants with the Nepal Army.

According to Nepalnews, Panta said there should be an agreement on the number of Maoist combatants before the Prime Minister could consider resigning.

“The Prime Minister has no compulsion to resign just because of the Unified CPN (Maoist) agitation.

Panta”s views come at a time when Nepal is facing increasing pressure from the Maoists, a section of his own party, CPN (UML) and the business community to resign to end the current political standoff.

American and European Union diplomats have also expressed dissatisfaction over government”s refusal to break the deadlock.

Meanwhile, the Unified CPN (Maoist) has declined a request made by Nepal to come for talks.

A Maoist Standing Committee meeting concluded that the government seems unwilling for a political consensus. (ANI)

Rats eat students’ exam papers

Nepalese university students awaiting results of end-of-year exams may be kept in suspense for a while longer after it emerged that many of their papers had been eaten by rats.

Hundreds of unmarked exam papers from Kathmandu’s Tribhuvan University were handed to a local police station to be kept under lock and key, but were inadvertently placed in a storeroom infested with rats, a police official said.

“The exams were two and half months ago. We kept the answer papers in a secure room,” police inspector Ram Prakash Chaudhary said.

“But a few days ago we discovered that some of them had been eaten by rats.

“We told the university officials about the problem straight away. But they only came to pick up the papers today, after the news came out.”

The papers had been stored in an old building with a leaking water pipe, the Rising Nepal newspaper said.

The newspaper accused Tribhuvan, the country’s oldest and biggest university, of “utter negligence”.

No-one at the university could be reached for comment.

China climbs down in Everest height fight

China and Nepal have agreed a solution to a long-running disagreement over the height of Mount Everest.

They agreed the world’s highest mountain, which traverses the border of the two countries, should be recognised as being 8,848 metres tall.

Chinese officials had argued it should be measured by its rock height, but Nepal said it should be measured by its snow height, which is four metres higher.

China has accepted that claim during talks in Nepal’s capital, Kathmandu.

Nepal’s decision to give MRP printing contract to India challenged in court

Kathmandu, Apr 7 (ANI): A writ petition was filed before Nepal’s Supreme Court on Tuesday against a government decision to award the contract for the printing of Machine Readable Passports (MRP) to an Indian government-owned firm.

Advocate Hem Mani Subedi filed the petition, stating that the decision to award the contract to India without bidding was illegal.

He said this decision would pose a threat to national security.

The Public Accounts Committee (PAC) of Nepal’s Parliament has already objected to the decision.

On Monday, Prime Minister Madhav Kumar Nepal said the government has awarded the contract for political and diplomatic reasons.

He also said the government had failed to move ahead with a decision of the PAC tender process due to time constraints.

The PAC had quizzed both Nepal and Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Sujata Koirala over the decision.

Earlier, the PAC’s had directed the Foreign Ministry to call for a fresh tender bid to print the MRPs and hand over the contract on the competition basis.

Disregarding the PAC directive, the cabinet gave its approval to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs to grant the contract to print MRPs to an Indian company on March 19, Nepalnews reported. (ANI)

13yo to make Everest bid

A 13-year-old California boy will attempt to become the youngest person to scale Mount Everest later this year, his latest stop in a bid to climb the highest peaks on seven continents.

Jordan Romero left Los Angeles late Monday (local time) for Nepal where he will launch what would be a record-breaking assault on the world’s highest mountain, which soars to 8,848 metres, local media reports said.

“I’ve been looking forward to this for so long and now it’s finally happening and man, you can’t even imagine the feeling of what it’s like right now,” he told America’s ABC News in Los Angeles.

Romero, who turns 14 in July, is aiming to become the youngest person to climb the highest summits on seven continents by the end of 2010.

According to his website, Romero has already bagged most of them, including Mount Kilimanjaro in Tanzania.

Romero’s father and step-mother are accompanying him on the Everest mission.

“This is all his mission. This is all his idea. It’s all his timeline. We’re just packing the bags, chasing him around the world. It’s pretty fun,” Jordan’s father, Paul Romero, said.

Swami Ramdev’s yoga camp concludes in Nepal

Kathmandu, Apr 1 (ANI): A six-day yoga science camp organized by the Patanjali Yoga Peeth Nepal and instructed by Swami Ramdev concluded in Kathmandu on Thursday.

The yoga camp attracted 35,000 participants including Prime Minister Madhav Kumar Nepal.

“Yoga has been in practice as an important human science to live a healthy life by all kinds of people across the world,” President Ram Baran Yadav said at the opening ceremony of the camp last Saturday.

Swami RamDev highlighted the need of the importance of yoga in daily life, Xinhua reports.

“We have to make it our daily habit, if we are healthy the nation is healthy,” he said.

Laxmi Shrestha, a housewife from Kathmandu said: “I have sickness related to nervous system and yoga helped me a lot. That is why I came here waking in the early morning.”

This is the second yoga camp by Swami Ramdev in the Kathmandu. (ANI)

Centre declines permission to Bihar CM to visit Nepal

Patna, Apr 01 (ANI): The Union Government has denied permission to Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar to visit Nepal to attend the post-death rites of former Nepal Prime Minister Girija Prasad Koirala.

Kumar is reportedly upset over the Union Government’s decision.

According to his office, Kumar was invited by Koirala’s daughter Sujata to attend her father’s post-death rites in Kathmandu on Thursday.

Kumar was eager to pay his last respects to Koirala.

In 2008, Government had denied Kumar permission to visit Nepal to oversee the Kusaha embankment repair work, where the River Kosi was breached.

Thousands of people from Bihar visit Nepal every day without any visa or passport, as there are no restrictions.

But a visit by a minister or a chief minister requires government permission, as it becomes a state visit to Nepal. (ANI)

Tamil Nadu chilli farmers benefit from ”drip irrigation” technique

Chennai, Mar 26 (ANI): The drip irrigation technique has benefited chilli farmers in Tamil Nadu”s Dharmapuri district.

“Drip irrigation is better for chilli cultivation. Using normal cultivation methods, farmers received revenue of between Rs 75,000 to 80,000. With the help of drip irrigation system, we receive amount between one to one and a half lakh rupees out of which we are able to save one lakh as profit,” said Rajkumar, a farmer.

The National Horticulture Scheme provides chilli farmers with access to improved irrigation techniques and subsidy.
“In the horticulture department, under National Horticulture Scheme, an area of expansion is being implemented. In this scheme, 80 hectares of chilli is being covered this year. A subsidy of 11,250 rupees per hectare is provided,” said Nagalingam, Assistant Director of National Horticulture.

In 2009, red chillies were cultivated in 67,000 hectares in Tamil Nadu.

India has immense potential to export different types of chillies demanded by local as well as many international markets.

Chilli exports have been rising over the last few years due to increased demand and short supply from other major producing countries like China and Pakistan.

Indian chillies are exported to United States, Sri Lanka, Mexico, Nepal, Bangladesh and the other Gulf countries. (ANI)

British man plans to run, cycle, swim around the world for 18 months for charity

London, Mar. 26 (ANI): An unemployed British teacher has decided to swim the Atlantic, cycle across Europe and Siberia and run across the US for 18 months for a charity cause.

Tourists took photographs when Dan Martin, 28, from Peterborough stood in scanty trunks and prepared to dive into the murky waters of the Serpentine in London at the tail end of the worst winter in more than 30 years.

“Lovely, isn”t it? Still, better than last week. I cut my finger on some ice when I got in,” The Guardian quoted a relaxed Martin, as saying.

Martin, who will begin his Global Triathlon on May 8, is trying to raise money for orphans in Nepal through his adventure.

“I always say it”s just to impress girls in bars, but it”s raising money for a great charity that helps orphans in Nepal. But also I think it”s the great British adventure that can be done, and should be done,” he said.

With nothing but his ginger beard and a whole lot of nerve to keep him warm, he will head out into the Atlantic, over the grave of the Titanic and up towards the Eurasian tectonic plate, the paper reports.

If all goes well, somewhere between four and six months and 3,500 miles later he will emerge in Brest, France.

There, Martin will start biking until he reaches Uelen, Asia”s most easterly settlement in Russia.

To get there, he will have pedalled through Siberia’s deadly winters.

“People think swimming the Atlantic is going to be the hardest part, but it”s probably the cycling. It can drop as low as minus 80C in the Siberian winter. Ha ha! I don”t even like cycling,” Martin said.

When Martin reaches Uelen he will be run back home.

Only when he reaches New York – probably at the end of 2011 – will his journey be concluded. (ANI)

India, Nepal exchange letters on Machine Readable Passports

Kathmandu, Mar 25 (ANI): Nepal Foreign Secretary Madan Kumar Bhattrai and Indian Ambassador Rakesh Sood on Wednesday exchanged letters for the supply of Machine Readable Passports (MRPs) to Nepal by the Indian Government undertaking – Nasik-based Security Printing and Minting Corporation of India.

According to Kantipur, the Nepal Cabinet decided to award the contract to India last Friday.

Though Nepal has already missed the International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO) deadline for issuing MRPs, the government has requested for an extension.

As per an agreement, the Indian Government will provide four million MRPs within three years at the rate of four dollars per copy.

The Indian company has asked for ten weeks to deliver the first consignment of MRPs to Nepal. The Government will be able to provide the first copy of MRPs at the end of July.
The President will receive the first copy of the MRP.

As per the ICAO deadline, Nepal has to implement the MRPs from April 1.

Earlier, the Public Accounts Committee (PAC) had directed the Nepal Foreign Ministry to revive the bidding for the MRP supply saying that imports from India would undermine national security issues. (ANI)

“They made us the poorest of the poor” say UK Gurkhas

London, Mar 22(ANI): Veterans of the Gurkha community in the UK have said that the men who once served the Queen and country proudly are now the “poorest of the poor” in Nepal.

Gyanraj Rai, member of the United British Gurkhas Ex-Servicemen’s Association (UBGEA), said that the community has been shattered into angry divisions, punctuated by accusations and counter-accusations.

Gurkhas, who retired before 1997 when the regiments relocated to the UK from Hong Kong, were granted the right to settle in the UK last summer, but their pension remains around 20 percent of other British soldiers.

“They made us the bravest of the brave, then they made us the poorest of the poor. They sent us home almost barefoot. Thousands of veterans have died of malnutrition and lack of medication,” The Independent quoted Rai, as saying.

“They would rather stay in Nepal, but they are penniless so they are borrowing money, selling their cows and buffaloes to come here,” he added.

Former Sgt Gajindra Rai, who came to Britain three weeks ago, said that the Gurkha Army Ex-Servicemen”s Association (GAESO) in Nepal had charged him 900 pounds, including the visa fee, for advice.

“They talked about lots of benefits and housing, but I have found nothing. I am very angry. I feel very betrayed to have been given the wrong information,” he added. (ANI)

Nepal’s former leader Koirala dies

Former Nepalese prime minister Girija Prasad Koirala has died aged 86.

Mr Koirala served four terms as prime minister and brokered a peace deal which ended a 10-year civil war.

In 2006 he sided with Maoist rebels to force King Gyanendra to relinquish his sweeping powers.

The Maoists abolished the Hindu monarchy after winning elections two years later, turning Nepal into a secular republic.

Mr Koirala, who had been suffering from respiratory disease for many years, died surrounded by family members at his daughter’s home in Kathmandu.

Thousands of people gathered outside to pay their respects to the elder statesman of Nepalese politics.

“Mr Koirala was a mass leader and a statesman, whose knowledge and wisdom guided the polity of Nepal in the right direction at critical junctures in the country’s history,” said India’s prime minister Manmohan Singh.

UN secretary general Ban Ki-moon said Mr Koirala “fought fearlessly and at considerable personal sacrifice for justice and democratic rights in his country”.

Mr Koirala began his political career as a union organiser and was imprisoned for seven years in 1960 after a failed uprising against the monarchy.

Upon his release he went into exile in India, where he masterminded the 1973 hijacking of a Royal Nepal Airlines plane known to be carrying hundreds of thousands of dollars in cash to fund his banned Nepali Congress Party.

As prime minister, he led the Himalayan nation through some of its biggest upheavals, including its most notorious incident when 10 members of the royal family were shot dead by the crown prince in a drunken rampage.

He was seen as a stabilising force in a country that has seen 18 governments in the last 20 years – although like many politicians in Nepal he faced frequent allegations of corruption.

His oft-repeated ambition was to see the peace process through before he died, and he remained heavily involved in politics until his death, playing a crucial role as broker between the Maoists and other parties.

“He will be much missed, especially now that the country is nearing the end of the peace process that he facilitated,” said Maoist leader Baburam Bhattarai.

- ABC/AFP

Koirala”s health condition deteriorates again

Kathmandu, Mar 19 (ANI): Ailing former Nepal Prime Minister and Nepali Congress President Girija Parsad Koirala”s health condition deteriorated again on Friday.

According to Kantipur, Koirala has again suffered from respiratory problems.

A team of doctors has reached Koirala”s residence at Mandikhatar in the capital.
Koirala was discharged from Sahid Gangalal Heart Centre in Bansbari on March 17 after the increase in oxygen level in his blood.

A chronic patient of pulmonary diseases, Koirala has been suffering from chest and urinary tract infection recently. He was bedridden for months. (ANI)

Koirala to be discharged from hospital today Koirala to be discharged from hospital today

Kathmandu, Mar 17 (ANI): Doctors looking after former Nepal Prime Minister and Nepali Congress President Girija Prasad Koirala today said his condition is improving and he will be discharged from hospital this evening.

According to them, the oxygen level in his blood has increased.

Koirala was rushed to the Sahid Gangalal Heart Centre in Bansbari on Sunday evening after the haemoglobin level in his blood dropped and he complained of difficulty in breathing.

A chronic patient of pulmonary diseases, Koirala has been suffering from chest and urinary tract infection recently. He was bedridden for months.

Meanwhile, UCPN (Maoist) Chairman Pushpa Kamal Dahal is due to visit the octogenarian leader in the hospital today, the Kantipur reported. (ANI)

World’s shortest man dead at 21

The world’s shortest man, 21-year-old He Pingping, who stood just over 75 centimetres, has died, Britain’s Guinness World Records says.

Mr He, a native of China who had a form of primordial dwarfism, was in Rome taking part in a television show when he suffered chest problems.

He was taken to hospital where he died at the weekend.

Craig Glenday, editor-in-chief of London-based Guinness World Records, recalled measuring Mr He in the northern Chinese region of Inner Mongolia in 2008.

“For such a small man, he made a huge impact around the world,” Mr Glenday said.

“From the moment I laid on eyes on him, I knew he was someone special. He had such a cheeky smile and mischievous personality, you couldn’t help but be charmed by him.

“He brightened up the lives of everyone he met, and was an inspiration to anyone considered different or unusual.”

Guinness World Records said it would announce Mr He’s successor as the world’s shortest man in due course.

Khagendra Thapa Magar, 18, from Nepal, who is reportedly 51 centimetres high, declared in February that he is the rightful holder of the title.

- AFP

Union Budget a shot in arm for Northeast development

New Delhi, Mar 10 (ANI): The Union Budget addressed the importance of infrastructure for sustained economic development and allotted money to boost the growth potential would be realized only if infrastructure does not become a severe and critical handicap.

The Union Budget presented by Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee in February aims at developing infrastructure in the northeast.

Rs 1,114 crores have been earmarked for development of infrastructure under the Pradhanmantri Gram Sadak Yojna.

Appropriate infrastructure will ensure a smoother farm to market connectivity indirectly enhancing the trade and commerce.

The Rail budget too focused on connecting remote areas of northeast with the rest of the country.

Connectivity with South Asian nations like Bangladesh and Nepal has been given a high priority.

Proposal of a direct rail link between Tripura and Bangladesh will indirectly promote India’s “Look East Policy.”

“Timing problem will be solved by this problem. Usually we take a long time to get cargo from any other states. After this train will begin, we will take less time and save money, which will be profit to us and good for our business,” said Habul Biswas an exporter.

“In the present rail budget the proposed Agartala-Akhuara rail connectivity on materializing shall help in industrial development of Tripura, better relation between the people of both nations as people to people contact shall increase, trade and business shall also boost up and thus Tripura shall develop and also northeast. Hence we are very happy with the rail budget, as there is proposal for Agartala-Akhuara rail connectivity,” said Jhantu Debnath, an employee.

Keeping in mind the welfare of people, the apex agency for development in northeast, DONER, has been allocated an additional Rs 285 crores, raising its funds to Rs 1760 from Rs 1475 crore.

To promote better air connectivity and facilities, Rs 121 crore has been set aside for the development of airports.

In addition Rs 80 crore has been added to the funds allocated to the Northeast council.

The council will now be given Rs 623 crore instead of Rs 543 crore for the development projects it has undertaken.

Though the subsidy for the Assam gas project has been reduced but regular funding will be maintained.

Mukherjee has also committed liberal funding towards the ongoing projects.

“There has been a tax relief to the common man. A relief of Rs 26000 crore has been diverted towards it. It is good for middle class as it is rising,” said R C Joshi, Chairman, Final Institute of North East Region.

“The budget actually puts back in track the agenda of reform that is very important. It shows the indication that government is thinking differently of how to give subsidy in future,” Madhujya Bezbaruah, Economist, Guwahati University.

Development of the Northeast region is a thrust area for the government

Four Nepali women being sent to Muscat detained at Gorakhpur

Gorakhpur, Sept 19 (ANI): Volunteers of a social service organisation and the personnel of the Anti-Human Trafficking Cell of Uttar Pradesh Police at Gorakhpur detained four Nepalese women.

Reportedly, as per the statement of the women who were taken into custody at the Gorakhpur Railway Station, they were intending to go to Muscat.

These women had entered India through the Sanauli border post.

Although all the four women had their respective passports with them, only two of them could show their endorsed visas for Muscat.

“Our team visited the railway station along with a Nepali counsellor. When she saw these women and spoke to them, they gave some wrong information, which in turn sounded fishy and made us to suspect something was amiss. When we asked them where they were heading, initially they said Oman and again changed their statement saying, New Delhi. When our counsellor asked them for their passports, some said they had it while others said they didn’t. So, we found them suspicious,” said Gyan Kumar, co-ordinator, Maanava Sewa Sansthan, Gorakhpur.

Amidst such confusing utterances by the women, the police believe that one of the women named Dilmaya was trying to send the other three to Muscat by bringing them from Nepal.

She claimed that they were going to Muscat because they had their relatives residing and working there.

“These people held us for interrogation. We asked them either to let us go to Nepal or else allow us to go to Muscat. We have our relatives there,” said Dilmaya.

A couple of months ago, police officials of Gorakhpur had detained five women who were allegedly being trafficked to Gulf countries for flesh trade.

Reportedly, a pimp was escorting these women to Mumbai from where they were to be sent to certain destinations in the Middle East. (ANI)

Prachanda warns of decisive revolt again in Nepal

Kathmandu, Sep 19 (ANI): Maoist chairman Prachanda has threatened to launch a decisive revolt in Nepal if the Maoist-floated resolution motion on civilian supremacy were not debated in the Parliament.

Addressing a mass meeting here on Friday, Prachanda said such a revolt would sweep away all the relics of feudalism and establish people’s rule.

He said his party has decided to become more flexible for finding solution of the current political deadlock through dialogue.

“Unless we ensure and bag victory, our revolt will continue. This time the reactionaries will be obliterated by the Maoists from the country’s political scene,” he added.

He also claimed that the commitment proposal floated by his party against the President’s move would be passed in the parliament comfortably as some lawmakers from the UML and the Madhesi parties have assured of their support.

He accused the Nepali Congress and the UML of opposing the idea of discussing the motion out of fear that the government would topple.

Earlier, addressing a workshop organised for senior PLA commanders and unqualified fighters in Shaktikhor, Chitwan, Prachanda informed the combatants that army integration and rehabilitation process would start soon under the supervision of Army Integration Special Committee (AISC).

According to Nepalnews, a number of combatants disqualified by the United Nations Mission in Nepal (UNMIN) were present at the workshop.

There are over 4,000 disqualified combatants in PLA cantonments despite repeated requests from the international community to discharge them. (ANI)