San Diego Union-Tribune

NEPAL’S TOP LEADER DISSOLVES PARLIAMENT

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Nepal’s top leader dissolved parliament Sunday amid infighting among members of the governing party, throwing into doubt the political future of a strategica­lly important Himalayan country where China and India have long jockeyed for inf luence.

Prime Minister K.P. Sharma Oli called for the dissolutio­n of the lower house of parliament despite protests from his own Nepal Communist Party and opposition groups, including the largest, Nepali Congress Party. Nepal is now set to hold elections starting in late April, more than a year earlier than the expected vote in November 2022.

Oli made his move in the face of rising dissatisfa­ction with his job performanc­e even within the ranks of his own party. He was elected to a second stint as prime minister in 2017 on promises of tamping down corruption and forging stronger ties with China and its economic growth machine.

But Oli’s administra­tion has been plagued with its own corruption allegation­s as well as criticism of his government’s handling of the pandemic, which has devastated an economy that has long depended on tourism. Divisions also lingered within his party, which was created by the alliance of two smaller communist parties in 2017.

By dissolving the lower house of parliament, Oli might avoid a potential noconfiden­ce vote from lawmakers. But experts said that he lacked the power to dissolve parliament and that the move could be challenged in Nepal’s highest court.

“Under existing constituti­onal provisions, dissolutio­n of parliament can’t be the prime minister’s prerogativ­e when there are many other options to form a new government,” said Bipin Adhikari, former dean of Kathmandu University Law School. “It’s an unconstitu­tional step.”

Nepal has long swung between favoring China or India. It has extensive economic ties with India, where many of its people work, and like India has a majority Hindu population.

 ?? PRAKASH MATHEMA AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? A protester from the Nepalese Students Union, which is affiliated with the opposition Nepali Congress Party, shouts slogans during a demonstrat­ion after the country’s parliament was abruptly dissolved in Kathmandu on Sunday.
PRAKASH MATHEMA AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES A protester from the Nepalese Students Union, which is affiliated with the opposition Nepali Congress Party, shouts slogans during a demonstrat­ion after the country’s parliament was abruptly dissolved in Kathmandu on Sunday.

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