The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Nepal votes in poll coloured by downturn and discontent

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KATHMANDU: Nepali voters began casting their ballots for a new parliament Sunday in a contest dominated by public frustratio­ns over the Himalayan republic’s elderly political elite and anxiety over its teetering economy.

A revolving door of prime ministers – most serving less than a year – and a culture of horse-trading has fuelled perception­s the government is out of touch with Nepal’s pressing problems.

Several younger faces are contesting for the first time, up against establishe­d parties whose leaders have strode the corridors of power for decades.

Though analysts expect the country’s entrenched political veterans to again dominate the next assembly, many voters have lost faith in the status quo and a mood for change is palpable.

“Every party took turns in government over the past five years and they did nothing,” Chiranjibi Dawadi, a driver by trade, told AFP this week.

“My family has decided to vote for a new party this time. It’s okay even if they don’t look after us. Old parties didn’t either.”

Sunday’s elections are the second since a new constituti­on was promulgate­d in 2015, ushering in a new political order after the conclusion of Nepal’s traumatic Maoist insurgency.

The civil war ended in 2006, having claimed more than 17,000 lives and prompting the abolition of the country’s monarchy, while also bringing the former rebels into the government fold.

Since then the former guerrillas have alternated in power with another Communist party and the establishe­d Congress in various coalitions.

But political instabilit­y has been a recurrent feature of Nepal’s parliament, and no prime minister has served a full term since the war ended.

A constant balancing act has left government­s of different stripes struggling to navigate the traditiona­l rivalry between Nepal’s two neighbours, China and India, at a time of rising Western concern with Chinesefun­ded mega-projects in the country. Incumbent premier Sher Bahadur Deuba, 76, is serving in the role for the fifth time. The two other main party leaders are 70 and 67, and have both held office as prime minister twice.

Public disaffecti­on with the trio has intensifie­d with the economy still in the doldrums from the pandemic, which devastated the vital tourism industry and dried up remittance­s from the huge number of Nepalis working abroad.

Inflation is spiking and the government has banned imports of several goods, including foreign liquor and television sets, to shore up its dwindling foreign exchange reserves.

Several younger candidates have thrown their hat into the ring this year, foremost among them bombastic journalist Rabi Lamichhane.

The charismati­c former television host, 48, made his name with a muckraking news programme where he shouted at officials and ran hidden camera stings on corrupt bureaucrat­s, tapping into public frustratio­n over endemic graft.

 ?? — AFP photo ?? Polling officials collect and check ballot boxes and other materials ahead of the upcoming elections in Kathmandu.
— AFP photo Polling officials collect and check ballot boxes and other materials ahead of the upcoming elections in Kathmandu.

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