The Scotsman

Voters walk for miles to take part in Nepal’s first post-war election

- By BINAJ GURUBACHAR­YA

Residents of mountain villages and foothill towns voted yesterday in Nepal’s first provincial polls, with the hope of bringing government closer to the Himalayan nation’s rural and remote areas.

Nepal’s chief election commission­er, Ayodhi Prasad Yadav, said turnout was more than 65 per cent among the 3.2 million voters who were choosing lawmakers in seven newly formed federal states as well as the national assembly.

The lawmakers elected yesterday and on 7 December in the remaining parts of the country will be able to name their states, draft provincial laws and choose local leaders.

“The central government is finally moving to our region. We will be closer to the government now with the state assemblies,” said schoolteac­her Swasthani Thapa, who was among the voters lining outside the polling station at Chautara, 80 kilometres east of Kathmandu, even before it opened at 7am.

Chautara was one of the areas hardest hit by a devastatin­g 2015 earthquake. People in Nepal’s mountain regions complained they did not get enough help from the central government because their voices were not heard. Two years later, destroyed and damaged houses are still scattered around Chautara and surroundin­g areas.

“This is a historic day for us,” said businessma­n Surya Lal Shrestha. “The setting-up of states will give final shape to the democracy process, which should finally bring stability and developmen­t for our country.”

In nearby Balefi village, election official Rijedra Subedi said people walked for up to four hours to reach the polling station.

“Farmer left their fields and labourers took the day off to come vote with their families,” Subedi said.

Nepal’s slow path to democracy began in 2006, when protesters forced the king to give up his rule. Two years later, Nepal officially abolished the centuries-old monarchy and decided that a federal system would best deliver services to all corners of the nation, which remains one of the poorest in the world.

But bickering among political parties delayed until 2015 the implementa­tion of the new constituti­on, which declared Nepal a republic.

Security was stepped up for the elections, with thousands of police and army soldiers deployed.

According to the home ministry, more than 400 people were detained in days leading up to the vote.

Soon after the constituti­on was implemente­d in 2015, protests by ethnic groups in southern Nepal turned violent and left some 50 people dead.

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