Nepal: Investigation Commission has banned former Prime Minister KP Oli

Kathmandu, September 28 (IANS). The commission, which examined during the recent generation-Z (Jane-Z) protests in Nepal Physical, Human and Physical Damage, took a difficult step and banned former Prime Minister KP Sharma Oli and former domestic minister Ramesh writer who left the country. In a statement issued on Sunday, the investigative commission said he ordered the relevant government agencies that apart from Oli and the author, former Home Secretary Gokarna Mani Duwadi, former head of national investigation division, Hutraj Thapa and former head of Kathmandu, Chitra Rizal. The commission has made it clear that all these people are being investigated and can be asked to ask for interrogation at any time, and therefore they were not only prevented from going abroad, but also to leave the Kathmandu Valley without permission. It is striking that at least 19 people were killed in the police on the first day of tribal protests held on September 8 and 9. In the coming days, this number increased to more than 70, as many injured died and people lost their lives in the incidents of arson. The protesters demanded that those responsible for these deaths and violent incidents be held accountable. Former Special Court President Gauri Bahadur Karki, compiled last week, is chaired by Gauri Bahadur Karki. The commission is the responsibility to judge human and physical damage, identify the causes of events and submit recommendations with their decisive conclusions. Apart from this, the commission will also have to submit a clear action plan for the effective implementation of its recommendations. After Gen-Z protests, there was a major change in the political situation in Nepal. Former Chief Justice Sushila Karki is currently leading the interim government. The most important responsibility of this government is to successfully execute the proposed election for representative meeting on March 5, 2026. The Investigation Commission is part of the consent between the government and the leaders of the Generation Z movement, so that the violence and the losses associated with it can be decided. According to preliminary studies by the Ministry of Urban Development, public infrastructure has lost more than 100 billion Nepalese calls due to sabotage and arson. 380 Federal government buildings were also damaged. At the same time, the Federation of Nepalese Chambers of Commerce and Industry, the highest setting of the private sector, estimated that private properties lost more than 80 billion Nepali calls. After these incidents, the pressure on the government of Nepal and the commission of inquiry increased to highlight the facts as soon as possible and put responsible persons in the dock. -Ians Ash/DKP Share This Story Tags

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