The Phnom Penh Post

Nepal goes to the polls in final round of historic vote

- Paavan Mathema

NEPAL voted yesterday in the final round of historic parliament­ary elections aimed at drawing a line under years of conflict and political turmoil in the Himalayan country.

Thousands of police and soldiers have been deployed in the capital Kathmandu and the volatile southern lowlands for the vote after pre-election violence that has left one dead and dozens injured.

It is the second phase of a watershed election for national and provincial parliament­s under a new constituti­on that represents the culminatio­n of the transition from feudal monarchy to federal democracy following a brutal civil war that ended 11 years ago.

“I’m feeling very happy to cast a vote because it can change the future of our country, which we are expecting,” said Kathmandu voter Samita Joshi. “As a young person I think that it will bring hope and opportunit­ies.”

Over 12.2 million people are eligible to vote in the elections, the first phase of which passed off peacefully last month.

But the south is home to a mosaic of ethnic minorities who say the constituti­on leaves them politicall­y marginalis­ed, a cause that has sparked bloody protests in recent years. Political analyst Chandra Kishor Jha said violence could return if the promises of a fairer distributi­on of power were not met under the new federal system.

“If they cannot fulfil their promises then the groups that have been part of the struggle will not stay quiet. There is possibilit­y of conflict again,” he said.

The vote will establish the country’s first provincial assemblies, devolving power away from a top-heavy central government that has cycled through 10 leaders in the last 11 years.

The newly-elected assemblies will be tasked with naming their provinces, which are currently referred to by number, as well as choosing capitals and negotiatin­g budgets with Kathmandu – all sensitive considerat­ions that could rekindle tensions in the ethnically-diverse south.

Years of political turbulence have hampered developmen­t in the impoverish­ed Himalayan nation, which is still recovering from a powerful earthquake that hit more than two years ago, killing 9,000 people and destroying over half a million homes.

It took nine years after the end of a decade-long civil war to agree to a new constituti­on. The charter adopted in 2015 mandated a sweeping overhaul of Nepal’s political system to give greater autonomy to the provinces. But it also sparked deadly protests in the south by ethnic minority groups who say it leaves them politicall­y marginalis­ed, and have demanded it be changed.

The communist CPN-UML party is expected to sweep the polls, buoyed by its alliance with the main Maoist party comprised of former rebels who fought government forces for a decade. Results are expected in the next few days.

 ?? MARCOU/AFP PIERRE-PHILIPPE ?? Low water levels at a reservoir in drought-stricken Entrepenas near Sacedon on November 24.
MARCOU/AFP PIERRE-PHILIPPE Low water levels at a reservoir in drought-stricken Entrepenas near Sacedon on November 24.
 ?? MATHEMA/AFP PRAKASH ?? A Nepali voter casts his ballot at a polling station during the second round of general elections in Kathmandu yesterday.
MATHEMA/AFP PRAKASH A Nepali voter casts his ballot at a polling station during the second round of general elections in Kathmandu yesterday.

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