Nepal enters election season as code of conduct comes into effect – Firstpost
The Code of Conduct for Nepal’s parliamentary elections came into effect on Monday.
Nepal is scheduled to hold elections to the parliament’s lower chamber, the House of Representatives, on March 5. The elections were necessitated after widespread protests toppled the government of Prime Minister KP Sharma Oli last year.
After Oli resigned amid widespread violence that targeted nearly every state institution, Sushila Karki, 73, became the interim prime minister on September 12, with the stated objective of holding elections at the earliest and handing over power to a democratically elected government.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
Last month, the Election Commission (EC) reported that 19 million voters and 114 political parties, many of them latest, would take part in the elections.
Of these 114 parties, around a fifth are fresh, and many were registered by young activists who were part of the agitation that brought down Oli’s government last year, according to AFP.
More from World
'Let the sovereign people decide': Japan headed for snap polls as PM announces parliament dissolution on Friday
From efficiency to resilience: WEF reports global supply chains entering an age of permanent volatility
Ahead of the elections, the Nepali Congress (NC), one of the country’s main parties, suffered a split. After the EC recognised the rebel faction as the real NC, the establishment faction approached the Supreme Court. The intra-party dispute has added fresh drama to the election cycle.
The code of conduct covers the federal and provincial governments and their ministers, constitutional bodies and officials, local executives and members, employees of government, semi-government, and public institutions, security personnel, political parties, and their affiliated organisations, according to The Kathmandu Post.
The code also applies to candidates and related individuals, election representatives, polling and counting agents, monitoring committee officials, observers, media institutions and personnel, private and non-governmental organisations and staff, educational institutions and employees, voters, development partners, and organisations running voter education programmes, as per The Kathmandu Post.
Quick Reads
View All
'Let the sovereign people decide': Japan headed for snap polls as PM announces parliament dissolution on Friday
'Will not be blackmailed’: Europe readies economic countermeasures to Trump’s Greenland tariff ultimatum
“The commission expects full cooperation from all concerned for effective implementation and adherence to the code of conduct,” Election Commission Spokesperson Narayan Prasad Bhattarai remarked.
Follow Firstpost on Google. Get insightfulexplainers, sharpopinions, and in-depthlatest updates on everything from geopolitics and diplomacy toWorld News. Stay informed with the latest perspectives only on Firstpost.TagsNepalHomeWorldNepal enters election season as code of conduct comes into effectEnd of Article