Oman Daily Observer

Nepal pushes back polls a third time, risks monsoon clash

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KATHMANDU: Nepal on Wednesday postponed local elections for a third time after its tiny Muslim community expressed concerns about the polls clashing with the holy month of Ramadhan.

The elections — the first at local level in 20 years and a key step in Nepal’s drawn-out peace process that ended a civil war in 2006 — have been beset by delays.

They were originally supposed to be held on one day but were split into two phases upon objections from the Madhesi, a minority group living along the border with India.

The first phase went ahead in mid-May but the second was delayed earlier this week in an attempt by the government to appease Madhesi parties threatenin­g to boycott the process.

The government has now been forced to push back the date a third time to avoid a clash with the last Friday of Ramadhan.

“The government has decided to postpone the polls to June 28 upon the request of the Muslim community, because June 23 was a major event of the Ramadhan festival,” Kumar Khadka, a government minister, said.

Muslims make up little more than four per cent of the population in Hindu-majority Nepal.

The new date puts the polls at the height of the monsoon season, raising further concerns that voters in remote areas could struggle to reach polling stations.

The monsoon in Nepal lasts for nearly three months from early June to late August, and travel is frequently disrupted.

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