Kuwait Times

Nepal votes in first local election in 20 years

Key step in the country’s transition to democracy

-

Nepal held local level polls yesterday, the first since 1997 and a key step in the country’s rocky transition to democracy over a decade since the end of the civil war. Around a third of registered voters across three provinces were eligible to cast their vote, with the rest of the country due to vote in a month’s time. The vote has been split into two phases because of unrest in the southern plains bordering India, where the minority Madhesi ethnic group is refusing to take part until an amendment to the constituti­on is passed.

Local representa­tives were last elected in 1997 and their five-year terms expired at the height of the brutal Maoist insurgency. The 10-year war ended in 2006 and the country began a fraught transition from a Hindu monarchy to a secular federal republic, which has seen it cycle through nine government­s. The long gap between polls has left an institutio­nal void at the local level, which has seen graft become a way of life in Nepal, hampering the delivery of basic services as well as the recovery from a devastatin­g 2015 earthquake.

“It is difficult to expect much from our politician­s-they have always been selfish and not worked for the people-but I hope that with this election things will change,” housewife Shova Maharjan, 41, told AFP after casting her vote in the capital. With nearly 70 percent of the population aged under 35, many were voting for their local representa­tives for the first time.

Polls opened at 7:00 am and closed at 5:00 pm, with each voter casting their ballot for seven local representa­tives: mayor, deputy mayor, ward chairman and four ward committee members. The ballot paper in the capital Kathmandu-one of the largest constituen­cies-was around one meter long (three feet) to accommodat­e the 878 candidates. Nearly 50,000 candidates were standing for election across 283 local municipali­ties in the first phase, with many registered as independen­ts or with a number of small reformist parties hoping to grab some votes from the traditiona­l political heavyweigh­ts. While the youth vote is seen as key in underminin­g the grip of the three main political parties, the elderly were also out in force, including an 105-year-old man who cast his ballot in Gorkha, the epicentre of the devastatin­g 2015 earthquake, according to the election commission.

Drawn-out peace process

There were sporadic reports of violence on Sunday with one person killed when police opened fire on a group attempting to raid a polling station in Dolakha district, 180 kilometers northwest of the capital Kathmandu, police told AFP. A bomb was also found early Sunday morning outside the house of a mayoral candidate for the main opposition CPNUML party in Bhaktapur, 15 kilometers east of Kathmandu. It was diffused without incident.

The remaining four provinces, considered potential flashpoint­s for electionre­lated violence, will vote in the second phase on June 14. But with results expected from Sunday’s vote later this week, observers have expressed concern that the first phase will influence the outcome of the second. As part of the deal that ended the civil war, a new constituti­on was written and finally adopted in September 2015, nearly a decade after the end of the conflict.

The charter mandated that local elections, followed by provincial and then national elections, be held by January 2018 — the final step in the drawn-out peace process. But the constituti­on sparked protests by the Madhesi community-who say the document leaves them politicall­y marginaliz­ed-and led to a months-long blockade of the India-Nepal border in 2015 that caused a crippling shortage of goods across the country. —AFP

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait