Oli again in optionless Nepal amid the Koro epidemic


- Nepal has never been able to remain stable as a republic and a parliamentary democracy

New delhi date. Saturday, May 15, 2021

The current round of power struggles in Nepal continued on Wednesday when the chief convener of the Pashupatinath temple saw the highest number of bodies in his life being cremated on a cremation ground due to the Kovid-19 epidemic. At the end of that day all the contenders were divided into different groups for failing to get a majority in Parliament. Due to this, President Vidyadevi Bhandari asked Prime Minister K.P. Sharma had re-appointed Oli as Prime Minister as he had the highest number of 61 MPs in his support.

With elections still 2 years away in Nepal, Oli may strengthen his position in the coming days. He has already split a group of Maoists led by former prime ministers-Madhav Kumar Nepal and Zalnath Khanal. In the future they may split both communist and non-communist parties. If the conflict continues, holding early elections will be the only option left.

Political instability and policy disability are almost entirely responsible for increasing the transition and mortality among the poor. As a republic and a parliamentary democracy, Nepal has never been able to remain stable but has been the victim of intense conflict and political instability indefinitely.

Covid transition and politics have merged all over the world where a large number of Southern nationalists are in power. Nepal's case differs only in that it is in crisis because of the ruling left's racist nationalists because they are like conservatives and followers of Marx and Mao.

After Oli lost the confidence vote on May 10, a group from the Nepali Congress, the Communist Party of Nepal-MC and the Jatiya Samajwadi Party urged President Bhandari to implement Article 76 (2) of the Constitution to pave the way for the formation of a new government. But when the contenders failed to get a majority in parliament, he re-appointed Oli as prime minister.

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